Study sheds light on long-term effects of logging after wildfire
By USDA Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research StationYubaNet.com April 10, 2007
A new study on the effects of timber harvest following wildfire shows that the potential for a recently burned forest to reburn can be high with or without logging.
A new study on the effects of timber harvest following wildfire shows that
the potential for a recently burned forest to reburn can be high with or without
logging. Recently published in the journal, Forest Ecology and Management, the
study demonstrates that the likelihood of a severe reburn is affected by the
timing – not just the amount – of fuel accumulation after fire.
The
study examines fuel accumulation with and without logging after a large wildfire
in the Blue Mountains of northeast Oregon. Three treatments were examined:
commercial logging that removed only dead trees with value for wood products,
commercial logging plus thinning that removed all dead trees larger than 4
inches in diameter, and unlogged sites.
The year after logging (3 years
after the fire), sites that were logged and thinned had four times more fine
fuels on the ground, as a result of logging residue, compared to unlogged sites.
Those same sites also had fewer snags– which provide habitat for woodpeckers,
owls, and other animals that nest in tree cavities – and contribute to large
woody debris on the ground. However, logging activity caused no change in the
litter or duff, the upper soil organic layers that also affect how a fire burns.
The study was led by James McIver of Oregon State University and Roger Ottmar of
the Pacific Northwest Research Station, U.S. Forest Service.
The
investigators used a computer model to project how fuels and fire hazard would
change over time. "Long-term research and monitoring are not always possible,"
says McIver. "Although we would rather have the long-term data, using a model
allows us to estimate some of the future ecological effects."
The
computer simulation showed that the difference in surface fuels between logged
and unlogged units would persist for about 15 years. The simulation also showed
that if a fire did start during this time, it would likely kill most young trees
as the fire carried through either logged or unlogged stands, even though the
logged stands had higher slash fuels. This is because other components of the
fuel bed (grasses and shrubs) would contribute significantly to fire conditions,
whether sites were initially logged or not.
"The exact nature of fuel
accumulation over time is the key to understanding fire hazard," explains
Ottmar. "Each forest, each fire, and each logging operation affects fuels
differently, and variation exists within any forest stand. It is also important
to consider the whole fuel bed when thinking about fire hazard in the
future."
Model projections indicated that large fuels will increase over
time in the unlogged forests as dead trees fall over, with up to three times
greater fuel accumulation as compared to a wildfire area that has been logged.
Although it would seem that any extra fuel would be a cause for concern, these
large fuels do not carry fire well on the surface, and so do not tend to create
conditions for crown fires. Rather, they will tend to cause long periods of
heating on the ground.
"Wood can be fuel in the short term or the long
term," says McIver, "but that's only part of the story. Wood is also wildlife
habitat, and wood provides nutrients to the soil. Fire, ecological factors, and
management objectives are all important. Our data show that there are no simple
answers."
To read the study, "Fuel mass and stand structure after
post-fire logging of a severely burned ponderosa pine forest in northeastern
Oregon," visit http://www.fs.fed.us/pnw/fera/news/newsletters/2007-feb.shtml
and click on postfire logging paper published.
