Colorado Forest Restoration Institute, Department of Forest and Rangeland Stewardship, Warner College of Natural Resources, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, USA.
Department of Forest and Rangeland Stewardship, Warner College of Natural Resources, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2022 Oct;32(7):e2682. doi: 10.1002/eap.2682. Epub 2022 Jul 20.
Over the past several decades, the management of historically frequent-fire forests in the western United States has received significant attention due to the linked ecological and social risks posed by the increased occurrence of large, contiguous patches of high-severity fire. As a result, efforts are underway to simultaneously reduce potential fire and fuel hazards and restore characteristics indicative of historical forest structures and ecological processes that enhance the diversity and quality of wildlife habitat across landscapes. Despite widespread agreement on the need for action, there is a perceived tension among scientists concerning silvicultural treatments that modify stands to optimally reduce potential fire behavior (fuel hazard reduction) versus those that aim to emulate historical forest structures and create structurally complex stands (restoration). In this work, we evaluated thinning treatments in the Black Hills National Forest that exemplify the extremes of a treatment continuum that ranges from fuel hazard reduction to restoration. The goal of this work was to understand how the differing three-dimensional stand structures created by these treatment approaches altered potential fire behavior. Our results indicate that restoration treatments created higher levels of vertical and horizontal structural complexity than the fuel hazard reduction treatments but resulted in similar reductions to potential crown fire behavior. There were some trade-offs identified as the restoration treatments created larger openings, which generated faster mean rates of fire spread; however, these increased spread rates did not translate to higher levels of canopy consumption. Overall, our results suggest that treatments can create vertical and horizontal complexity desired for restoration and wildlife habitat management while reducing fire hazard and that they can be used in concert with traditional fuel hazard reduction treatments to reduce landscape scale fire risk. We also provide some suggestions to land managers seeking to design and implement prescriptions that emulate historical structures and enhance forest complexity.
在过去几十年中,由于大面积、连续高严重性火灾发生的频率增加,美国西部历史上频繁发生火灾的森林的管理引起了人们的高度关注,因为这会带来生态和社会风险。因此,正在努力同时减少潜在的火灾和燃料危险,并恢复历史森林结构和生态过程的特征,这些特征可以提高景观中野生动物栖息地的多样性和质量。尽管人们普遍认为需要采取行动,但科学家们对抚育措施存在一种看法,即改变林分以最佳地降低潜在火灾行为(减少燃料危险)与那些旨在模拟历史森林结构并创造结构复杂的林分(恢复)之间存在紧张关系。在这项工作中,我们评估了黑山林场的疏伐处理,这些处理是从燃料危险减少到恢复的处理连续体的极端例子。这项工作的目的是了解这些处理方法所产生的不同三维林分结构如何改变潜在的火灾行为。我们的结果表明,恢复处理比燃料危险减少处理创造了更高水平的垂直和水平结构复杂性,但导致潜在树冠火灾行为的减少相似。我们确定了一些权衡,因为恢复处理创造了更大的开口,这导致了更快的平均火灾蔓延速度;然而,这些增加的蔓延速度并没有转化为更高水平的树冠消耗。总体而言,我们的结果表明,处理可以在减少火灾危险的同时,创造出恢复和野生动物栖息地管理所需的垂直和水平复杂性,并且可以与传统的燃料危险减少处理一起使用,以降低景观尺度的火灾风险。我们还为寻求设计和实施模拟历史结构和增强森林复杂性的处方的土地管理者提供了一些建议。