Title: Herman Stegehuis
1Landscape Fire Assessment Framework for Fuel
Management
- Herman Stegehuis
- and
- Sherra Quintilio
- October 7, 2003
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2Outline
- Sustainable Forest Management Issues
- Landscape Objectives
- Landscape Fire Assessment
- Planning Jurisdictions
- FireSmart/Fuel Management Implementation
Strategies - Key Messages
3Sustainable Forest Management Issues
- Forests are Finite and Heavily Committed
- Concerns Over Ecological Integrity
- Concerns Over Increased Fire Risk
- Increased Demands For Preservation
- A Wide Spectrum Of Public Values Must Be
Accommodated - Long Term Economic Viability Is Tied To
Sustainable Resource Management - Management for individual values rarely sustains
all values Kimmins, 2003
4Fuel Management?
Politics?
Costs?
Roles and Responsibilities?
Priorities?
Ecological Integrity
Economic Viability
Stakeholders?
SFM
Legislation?
Landscape Objectives?
Social Acceptance
Scale?
Land base?
Strategies?
Jurisdiction?
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6Landscape Objectives
- To Conserve Biodiversity
- To Provide for Recreation Opportunities
- To Provide Sustainable Use and Development of the
Forest Resource - Conservation of Soil and Water Resources
- Reduce Wildfire Threat Potential
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14Why Do We Need To Consider Fire Regime?
- Fire competes with forest harvesting
- Demands for increased preservation
- Concern that tree densities, and fuel loading in
some fire - dependent ecosystems are greater than
historical conditions - Fire severity is moving outside the natural
range of variability - Increasing concern of firefighter safety and
property losses in Canada - Fire dependent plant communities (positive
ecological effects of fire) - Concerns over ecological integrity/forest health
15Fire Regime Components
- Fire Size
- Fire Frequency
- Fire Season
- Fire Type
- Fire Intensity
- Fire Severity
- Fire Cycle
16Fire Regime Implementation
- Harvest and PB in high risk areas
- Lower intensity PB in moderate risk areas
- Additive vs compensatory use of harvest and PB
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18Understanding the Fire Environment
How do we use this information? Over to Herman.
19Active/Passive Land Base
- 35,000,000 ha of Forested Area in Total
- 15,000,000 ha AAC Tenure
- 20,000,000 ha Non-Operating Land Base
WMAs FMAs FMUs Parks and Protected
Areas Communities
20Scale?
21Stakeholders
22FireSmart/Fuel Management Implementation
Strategies to Achieve Landscape Objectives
23Forest Management Practices
Fuel Management Strategies
Implementing fuels management at strategic
locations on the landscape to reduce the risk of
large fires (fire door effect)
Miller Western
2098
2000
CFS
24Block design
25Control Line / Landscape Wedge
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27Salvaging
28Mulching / Mowing
29Debris disposal
30Scarification
31Reforestation
32Mixedwood management
33Herbicide
34Grazing
35Linear Disturbances
36FireSmart Landscape Strategies
Prescribed Fire
37Implementation Examples
- FireSmart Landscape Website
- FireSmart Annex in revised DFMP Manual
- Prescribed fire program
- Foothills Model Forest, Highway 40 Project
- C5 Forest Management Planning
- Alberta Pacific Forest Industries wildfire threat
assessment - Wildfire Threat Assessment training program
- Debris Management Committee
- FireSmart Landscape Task Force
- Partners in Protection Community Planner
- Community Protection planning and projects
- Integrating Fire and Sustainable Forest
Management Course - Prescribed Burning Course
38Key Take Home Messages
- Landscape Fire assessments need to be an input
into forest and land management planning
processes, recognizing both the positive
attribute and negative consequences of wildfire - Consider strategies within context of Sustainable
Forest Management - Various fuel management strategies are available
and need to be locally specific, and dependant on
scale and linked back to the achievement of
landscape objectives