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2009

Congaree National Park
Fuels Reduction Program Reduces Wildfire Intensity
National Fire Plan – Fuels Reduction and Firefighting*
 

In March 2009, the South Carolina Division of Forestry informed the National Park Service (NPS) that a prescribed fire on private land adjacent to Congaree National Park had escaped onto the park’s upland pine forest. When it reached park property, the fire began creeping along the ground with average flame lengths of three inches. NPS firefighters quickly established a new firebreak and contained the fire at nineteen acres.

Forested area regenerating after wildfire.

The fire’s slow rate of spread and low intensity behavior in Congaree National Park resulted from the NPS hazardous fuels reduction program. The NPS property affected by the wildfire has been treated with prescribed fire on a 2-4 year rotation by the Cumberland Gap Wildland Fire Module, with the most recent treatment by broadcast burn in October 2008. The fire management objectives of Congaree National Park are to promote natural succession patterns, maintain and improve habitat for the endangered red-cockaded woodpecker, and to reduce hazardous fuel accumulations to normal, natural levels.

This incident demonstrated the success of the NPS prescribed fire program in reducing hazardous fuel accumulations and lowering the risk of dangerous, fast-spreading wildfires.

Contact: Corinne Fenner, Park Ranger or Bill Hulslander, Fire Management Officer
Phone: (803) 776-4396

*This story supports the National Fire Plan

Placid lake surrounded by trees.

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