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1995 Annual Report - Research, Inventory, and Monitoring:
Mineral King Risk Reduction Project
Anthony C. Caprio (ed.), Science and Natural Resources Division
Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks, California
Executive Summary
The Mineral King Risk Reduction Project (MKRRP) was initiated
out of a need to assess the operational requirements and cost
effectiveness of large scale prescribed burning for wildland management
in a setting altered by a century of fire suppression. The direct
objectives of the project will be to initiate the reduction of
unnatural fuel accumulations and to begin restoration of ecosystem
structure and function within the East Fork watershed. However,
because the scale of the prescribed burn project is unprecedented,
a number monitoring and research projects were also initiated
to assess the impacts and responses to the burn of key attributes
of both the watershed and the vegetation. These projects and their
results are of critical importance since burning on this scale
is a new and untried management strategy with little information
existing on either short- or long-term resource impacts and responses.
Information from these results will feed back into management
planning and permit modification and fine tuning of the burn program
in addition to providing information to both the public and policy
makers.
Following a major planning effort during the spring of 1995, sampling
for the MKRRP was begun in June with the objective of collecting
baseline or background data in 1995 prior to the initiation of
burning. Several types of vegetation sampling was conducted. Standard
fire effects monitoring plots were installed in forest and chaparral
sites and new Natural Resource Inventory (NRI) plots were established
that supplement existing plots in the watershed. An additional
study was begun to look at the relationship between fire-scar
development in giant sequoias and local fuel loadings. Extensive
fuel inventory sampling was also carried out on the south facing
aspect of the drainage which will be used as input to the FARSITE
fire spread model. Wildlife studies were conducted with these
emphasizing fire effects on small mammal populations, but also
addressed questions regarding the effects of burning on mountain
beaver colonies and fishers populations, sensitive species located
in the watershed. Water related sampling was carried out and monitoring
equipment installed that looked at stream chemistry, hydrology,
and aquatic macroinvertebrates to obtain data on how these will
be affected by the burning program. Lastly, fire history sampling
was conducted within the watershed to begin looking at spatial
extent and variation of past fire events on a landscape scale.
Projects funded out of the Mineral King Risk Reduction Project
include fire effects monitoring, fuel and wildlife inventories,
and a study on the relationship between fuel loadings and fire
impacts on giant sequoia fire scars. Other projects being conducted
using resources from within Sequoia and Kings Canyon National
Parks and the Sequoia and Kings Canyon Field Station (National
Biological Service) include; natural resource inventory, watershed
hydrology, stream chemistry, and fire history. Cooperative research
concentrating on aquatic biota in the watershed is also being
conducted by the University of California, Davis. Resource and
research objectives for 1996 will entail the continuation of most
studies that were initiated in 1995. Areas sampled in 1995 will
be resampled if they were within the perimeters of the area burned
in segment #3 and not already rechecked. New sites to be sampled
during 1996 will concentrate on segments scheduled for burning
during the summer and fall 1996. These will emphasize fire effects
plots, fuel loads, small mammal trapping in new vegetation types,
and fire history. Continued sampling will include watershed, and
aquatic biota. Resampling of the 1970's Pitcher plots (set up
to examine forest structure and fuels in red fir forest) will
be given emphasis to acquire these data prior to these plots on
the south side of the East Fork being reburned. Two new graduate
student studies will also be initiated in the watershed during
the summer of 1996. One will use remote sensing data to update
vegetation classification for the area and evaluate fuels at a
landscape scale while the second will be addressing questions
revolving around the means and the landscape-scale consequences
of selecting differing mechanisms for restoring forest structure
to something near pre-Euroamerican conditions.
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