Resource Catalog
Document
From the Introduction...'Fire management's integration into land management planning is critical to the successful management of nearly all wildland ecosystems, including westside forests, which lie west of the Cascade crest in Oregon and the northern coastal ranges in California. Restoration and maintenance of fire as an ecosystem process is critical to retention of biological diversity and ecosystem sustainability. Knowledge of the natural roles of fire across the landscape, the effects of wildfire and prescribed fire, and the levels of risk of large-scale, high-severity fire, as well as the effects of fire exclusion must be incorporated into all scales of land management planning and assessment. Fire management planning must become an element of land management planning, rather than remain separate from (and typically undertaken subsequent to) land management planning. All aspects of fire management - fire suppression, prescribed fire, fuels management, smoke management, fire planning, modeling, risk and hazard analysis, fire history and fire ecology - will need to be considered by interdisciplinary teams during land management planning.' From the Conclusion...'Fire as an ecological process is rarely a single, one-time event. Moreover, when fire is deliberately used as a tool in restoring maintaining ecosystems, fire is often applied repeatedly (and always with great care when applied after a prolonged exclusion). When fire is integrated into land management planning, it frequently requires a change in the thought processes of resource managers. This is also not a single event. Like fire's application as a tool, incorporating fire management into land management planning will also require great care and diligence. The integration process must be repeated with each assessment, with each plan, and with each project.'
Cataloging Information
- air quality
- ecosystem dynamics
- environmental impact statements
- fire exclusion
- fire hazard reduction
- fire management
- fire regimes
- fire suppression
- histories
- land management
- multiple resource management
- Oregon
- smoke management
- species diversity (animals)
- species diversity (plants)
- succession
- threatened and endangered species (animals)
- US Forest Service
- watershed management
- wilderness areas
- wilderness fire management
This bibliographic record was either created or modified by Tall Timbers and is provided without charge to promote research and education in Fire Ecology. The E.V. Komarek Fire Ecology Database is the intellectual property of Tall Timbers.