1 / 17

Fire in the boreal mixedwood: highlights for mixedwood managers.

Fire in the boreal mixedwood: highlights for mixedwood managers. Steve Cumming, Meg Krawchuk and Cecilia Arienti June 21 2006 Edmonton, Alberta. Time passages. 2006. 1992?. Phil Burton. Meg Krawchuk. Cecilia Arienti. What distribution of stands do we want to maintain?.

oya
Download Presentation

Fire in the boreal mixedwood: highlights for mixedwood managers.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Fire in the boreal mixedwood: highlights for mixedwood managers. Steve Cumming, Meg Krawchuk and Cecilia Arienti June 21 2006 Edmonton, Alberta

  2. Time passages 2006 1992? Phil Burton Meg Krawchuk Cecilia Arienti

  3. What distribution of stands do we want to maintain?

  4. How should these be brought about… (e.g. some ways to get a spruce stand) Easy, very slow, unreliable Very hard, slow Canadian Forest Service F. Schmiegelow

  5. …though time and space, given abiotic constraints… ~10,000 sq km

  6. … 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.

  7. What do fires burn? Pre-fire inventory maps!

  8. 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

  9. Landscape management can partially control outcomes of future fires A little calculus says how Landscape-specific assessments and prescriptions for mixed stand management?

  10. Where do fires start? Fire arrivals registered to township Ignition potential (joint lightning and fire weather indices) Forest inventory data Elevation, Location, SSR, etc. (counts / 10,000ha 1yr)

  11. 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

  12. Count models agree (same area, different period) Burns Roads Aw Sw Arienti, in prep.

  13. 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

  14. Fire counts increase in harvested landscapes for up to 30yr Recent Cuts Recent Burns

  15. These models can be rolled up to map fire risk

  16. 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

  17. Don’t un-mix the mixedwood Risky and expensive Managing for mature DC stands can sustain both Sw harvest and ecological values.

More Related