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Tamm Review: Postfire landscape management in frequent-fire conifer forests of the southwestern United States

Journal

FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
Volume 502, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.foreco.2021.119678

Keywords

Forests; Fuel; Landscape; Ponderosa pine; Postfire; Reforestation

Categories

Funding

  1. Burned Area Learning Network
  2. Promoting Ecosystem Resilience and Fire Adapted Communities Together
  3. The Nature Conservancy, US Department of Agriculture (USDA) Forest Service
  4. Department of the Interior
  5. Joint Fire Science Program -Southwest and Southern Rockies Fire Science Consortia
  6. US Geological Survey (USGS) Climate Research and Development Program
  7. USDA Forest Service

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The increasing incidence of wildfires in the southwestern US has led to extensive burning of historically frequent-fire conifer forests, creating complex burned landscapes with surviving forest patches and severely burned areas. These landscapes present unique challenges for successful conifer regeneration, with severe burned patches containing barriers and heavy fuels impacting future fire behavior. Surviving forest patches are valuable for postfire reforestation but are often overlooked.
The increasing incidence of wildfires across the southwestern United States (US) is altering the contemporary forest management template within historically frequent-fire conifer forests. An increasing fraction of southwestern conifer forests have recently burned, and many of these burned landscapes contain complex mosaics of surviving forest and severely burned patches without surviving conifer trees. These heterogeneous burned landscapes present unique social and ecological challenges. Severely burned patches can present numerous barriers to successful conifer regeneration, and often contain heavy downed fuels which have cascading effects on future fire behavior and conifer regeneration. Conversely, surviving forest patches are increasingly recognized for their value in postfire reforestation but often are overlooked from a management perspective. Here we present a decision-making framework for landscape-scale management of complex postfire landscapes that allows for adaptation to a warming climate and future fire. We focus specifically on historically frequent-fire forests of the southwestern US but make connections to other forest types and other regions. Our framework depends on a spatially-explicit assessment of the mosaic of conifer forest and severely burned patches in the postfire landscape, evaluates likely vegetation trajectories, and identifies critical decision points to direct vegetation change via manipulations of fuels and live vegetation. This framework includes detailed considerations for postfire fuels management (e.g., edge hardening within live forest patches and repeat burning) and for reforestation (e.g., balancing tradeoffs between intensive and extensive planting strategies, establishing patches of seed trees, spatial planning to optimize reforestation success, and improving nursery capacity). In a future of increasing fire activity in forests where repeated low- to moderate-severity fire is essential to ecosystem resilience, the decision-making framework developed here can easily be integrated with existing postfire man-agement strategies to optimize allocation of limited resources and more actively manage burned landscapes.

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