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  • Fire Regimes, Past and Present


    Carl N. Skinner
    U.S. Forest Service
    Pacific Southwest Research Station
    Redding, California

    Chi-ru Chang
    School of the Environment
    Duke University
    Durham, North Carolina

    ABSTRACT: Fire has been an important ecosystem process in the Sierra Nevada for thousands of years. Before the area was settled in the 1850's, fires were generally frequent throughout much of the range. The frequency and severity of these fires varied spatially and temporally depending upon climate, elevation, topography, vegetation, edaphic conditions, and human cultural practices.

    Current management strategies and those of the immediate past have contributed to forest conditions that encourage high-severity fires. The policy of excluding all fires has been successful in generally eliminating fires of low to moderate severity as a significant ecological process. However, current technology is not capable of eliminating the high-severity fires. Thus, the fires that affect significant portions of the landscape, which once varied considerably in severity, are now almost exclusively high-severity, large, stand-replacing fires. The resulting landscape patterns are much coarser in grain.

    Many gaps still exist in our knowledge of fire as an ecological process in the Sierra Nevada.


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