Department of Environmental Sciences, Policy, and Management, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, California, USA.
Informatics and GIS Statewide Program, University of California Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Davis, California, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2024 Sep;34(6):e3014. doi: 10.1002/eap.3014. Epub 2024 Jul 14.
Indigenous communities throughout California, USA, are increasingly advocating for and practicing cultural fire stewardship, leading to a host of social, cultural, and ecological benefits. Simultaneously, state agencies are recognizing the importance of controlled burning and cultural fire as a means of reducing the risk of severe wildfire while benefiting fire-adapted ecosystems. However, much of the current research on the impacts of controlled burning ignores the cultural importance of these ecosystems, and risks further marginalizing Indigenous knowledge systems. Our work adds a critical Indigenous perspective to the study of controlled burning in California's unique coastal grasslands, one of the most biodiverse and endangered ecosystems in the country. In this study, we partnered with the Amah Mutsun Tribal Band to investigate how the abundance and occurrence of shrubs, cultural plants, and invasive plants differed among three adjacent coastal grasslands with varying fire histories. These three sites are emblematic of the state's diverging approaches to grassland management: fire suppression, fire suppression followed by wildfire, and an exceedingly rare example of a grassland that has been repeatedly burned approximately every 2 years for more than 30 years. We found that Danthonia californica was significantly more abundant on the burned sites, whereas all included shrub species (Baccharis pilularis, Frangula californica, and Rubus ursinus) were significantly more abundant on the site with no recorded fire, results that have important implications for future cultural revitalization efforts and the loss of coastal grasslands to shrub encroachment. In addition to conducting a culturally relevant vegetation survey, we used Sentinel-2 satellite imagery to compare the relative severities of the two most recent fire events within the study area. Critically, we used interviews with Amah Mutsun tribal members to contextualize the results of our vegetation survey and remote sensing analysis, and to investigate how cultural burning contrasts from typical Western fire management approaches in this region. Our study is a novel example of how interviews, field data, and satellite imagery can be combined to gain a deeper ecological and cultural understanding of fire in California's endangered coastal grasslands.
美国加利福尼亚州的土著社区越来越多地倡导和实践文化防火管理,带来了一系列社会、文化和生态效益。与此同时,州政府机构也认识到受控燃烧和文化火的重要性,认为这是降低严重野火风险的一种手段,同时也有利于适应火灾的生态系统。然而,目前关于受控燃烧影响的研究大多忽略了这些生态系统的文化重要性,这有可能进一步使土著知识体系边缘化。我们的工作为加利福尼亚独特的沿海草原受控燃烧研究增加了一个关键的土著视角,加利福尼亚的沿海草原是该国生物多样性最丰富和最濒危的生态系统之一。在这项研究中,我们与 Amah Mutsun 部落合作,调查了在三个具有不同火灾历史的相邻沿海草原中,灌木、文化植物和入侵植物的丰度和出现情况有何不同。这三个地点代表了该州对草原管理的不同方法:火灾抑制、火灾抑制后发生野火,以及一个极为罕见的例子,一个草原在 30 多年的时间里每隔大约 2 年就被反复烧毁。我们发现,Danthonia californica 在燃烧的地点明显更丰富,而所有包括的灌木物种(Baccharis pilularis、Frangula californica 和 Rubus ursinus)在没有记录火灾的地点明显更丰富,这些结果对未来的文化振兴工作以及沿海草原被灌木侵入的损失具有重要意义。除了进行与文化相关的植被调查外,我们还使用 Sentinel-2 卫星图像比较了研究区域内最近两次火灾事件的相对严重程度。至关重要的是,我们使用与 Amah Mutsun 部落成员的访谈来使我们的植被调查和遥感分析结果具有背景意义,并探讨在该地区文化燃烧如何与典型的西方火灾管理方法形成对比。我们的研究是一个新颖的例子,说明了访谈、实地数据和卫星图像如何结合起来,以更深入地了解加利福尼亚濒危沿海草原的火灾生态和文化。