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Published byLilian Singleton Modified over 6 years ago
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Fire in the boreal mixedwood: highlights for mixedwood managers.
Steve Cumming, Meg Krawchuk and Cecilia Arienti June Edmonton, Alberta
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Time passages 1992? 2006 Phil Burton Meg Krawchuk Cecilia Arienti
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What distribution of stands do we want to maintain?
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How should these be brought about…
(e.g. some ways to get a spruce stand) Easy, very slow, unreliable Very hard, slow F. Schmiegelow Canadian Forest Service
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…though time and space, given abiotic constraints…
~10,000 sq km
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… and fire? Fire risk depends on: frequency, size, composition and severity; Risk components can be quantified; They are not exogenous; Fire and the forest mosaic interact in space and time.
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What do fires burn? Pre-fire inventory maps!
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Compositional analysis
Fire composition depends on the landscape where it occurs. Fires are selective foragers. Selection is strongest amongst mixedwood stands: Leading deciduous: ICK Leading white spruce: YUM Photo: N. Lavoie, Canadian Forest Service
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Landscape management can partially control outcomes of future fires
A little calculus says how Landscape-specific assessments and prescriptions for mixed stand management?
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Where do fires start? Fire arrivals registered to township
Ignition potential (joint lightning and fire weather indices) Forest inventory data Elevation, Location, SSR, etc. Scaled counts: 10,000ha per year (counts / 10,000ha 1yr)
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Fire occurrence probability (annual, per township)
Sw->Aw Sb->Aw Forest composition effects are dominant. Main contrasts: Aw () Sw (++) Sb(+). Recent burns () Krawchuk et al. 2006
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Count models agree (same area, different period)
Burns Roads Aw Sw Arienti, in prep.
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Mixed stands have two opposite and extremal fire “modes”
The “switch” is species composition Aw: fires start rarely, spread poorly Sw: start frequently, spread readily Good news: managers can control species mix at stand and landscape scales
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Fire counts increase in harvested landscapes for up to 30yr
Recent Cuts Recent Burns
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These models can be rolled up to map fire risk
From 10,000 1yr simulations of veg-specific fire arrivals, natural escape p. and “correct” growth, we get mapped point estimates of burn probability/yr. Note huge spatial variation (> 1 order of magnitude).
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Mixedwood management is fire management
Implications Spatially variable risks from fires in noncommercial forests and wetlands can be accounted for and possibly exploited. Roads & harvesting increase fire starts. Controlling species composition of mixed stands has largest effect on fire risk. Mixedwood management is fire management
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Don’t un-mix the mixedwood
Risky and expensive Managing for mature DC stands can sustain both Sw harvest and ecological values.
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