Skip to main content

FRAMES logo
Resource Catalog

Document

Type: Journal Article
Author(s): Ellis Q. Margolis; Jeff Balmat
Publication Date: 2009

The Santa Fe municipal watershed provides up to 40% of the city's water and is at high risk of a stand-replacing fire that could threaten the water resource and cause severe ecological damage. Restoration and crown fire hazard reduction in the ponderosa pine (PP) forest is in progress, but the historic role of crown fire in the mixed-conifer/aspen (MC) and spruce-dominated forests is unknown but necessary to guide management here and in similar forests throughout the southwestern United States. The objective of our study was to use dendroecological techniques to reconstruct fire history and fire–climate relationships along an elevation, forest type, and fire regime gradient in the Santa Fe River watershed and provide historical ecological data to guide management. We combined systematic (gridded) sampling of forest age structure with targeted sampling of fire scars, tree-ring growth changes/injuries, and death dates to reconstruct fire occurrence and severity in the 7016 ha study area (elevation 2330–3650 m). Fire scars from 141 trees (at 41 plots) and age structure of 438 trees (from 26 transects) were used to reconstruct 110 unique fire years (1296-2008). The majority (79.0%) of fires burned during the late spring/early summer. Widespread fires that scarred more than 25% of the recording trees were more frequent in PP (mean fire interval (MFI)25% = 20.8 years) compared to the MC forest (31.6 years). Only 24% of the fires in PP were recorded in the MC forest, but these accounted for a large percent of all MC fires (69%). Fire occurrence was associated with anomalously wet (and usually El Niño) years preceding anomalously dry (and usually La Niña) years both in PP and in the MC forest. Fire in the MC occurred during more severe drought (mean summer Palmer Drought Severity Index; PDSI = -2.59), compared to the adjacent PP forest (PDSI = -1.03). The last fire in the spruce forest (1685) was largely stand-replacing (1200 ha, 93% of sampled area), recorded as fire scars at 68% of plots throughout the MC and PP forests, and burned during a severe, regional drought (PDSI = -6.92). The drought–fire relationship reconstructed in all forest types suggests that if droughts become more frequent and severe, as predicted, the probability of large, severe fire occurrence will increase.

Online Links
Citation: Margolis, Ellis Q.; Balmat, Jeff. 2009. Fire history and fire-climate relationships along a fire regime gradient in the Santa Fe Municipal Watershed, NM, USA. Forest Ecology and Management 258(11):2416-2430.

Cataloging Information

Regions:
Partner Sites:
Keywords:
  • Abies concolor
  • Abies lasiocarpa
  • age classes
  • catastrophic fires
  • coniferous forests
  • crown fires
  • dendrochronology
  • dendroecology
  • dominance
  • Douglas-fir
  • drought
  • elevation
  • ENSO - El Nino Southern Oscillation
  • fire hazard reduction
  • fire intensity
  • fire management
  • fire regimes
  • fire scar analysis
  • fire scars
  • fire severity
  • forest management
  • forest types
  • histories
  • Juniperus scopulorum
  • mixed conifer
  • mixed severity fire regimes
  • mortality
  • New Mexico
  • Picea engelmannii
  • Picea spp.
  • pine
  • Pinus edulis
  • Pinus ponderosa
  • Pinus strobiformis
  • plant growth
  • ponderosa pine
  • Populus tremuloides
  • prehistoric fires
  • Pseudotsuga menziesii
  • rate of spread
  • sampling
  • spruce
  • statistical analysis
  • trees
  • water
  • watershed management
  • watersheds
  • wildfires
Tall Timbers Record Number: 24261Location Status: In-fileCall Number: Fire FileAbstract Status: Fair use, Okay, Reproduced by permission
Record Last Modified:
Record Maintained By: FRAMES Staff (https://www.frames.gov/contact)
FRAMES Record Number: 9186

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.
This document is part of the Southwest FireCLIME Annotated Bibliography, which includes published research related to the interactions between climate change, wildfire, and subsequent ecosystem effects in the southwestern U.S. The publications contained in the Bibliography have each been summarized to distill the outcomes as they pertain to fire and climate. Go to this document's record in the Southwest FireCLIME Annotated Bibliography.