A mosaic of burned and unburned patches left from the Section 33 fire, 2004.
When a fire burns on the landscape elements such as topography, fuel, and weather combine to give each fire a unique burn pattern producing a mixed landscape composed of different vegetation types and tree age classes. The result is a landscape with tremendous diversity, an array of different plant species, and habitat for a wide variety of wildlife.
The forests communities of Voyageurs depend on fire for a variety of functions. Fire removes competition from brush, allowing light to reach the forest floor, and exposes the soil preparing a seedbed. This encourages growth of forest herbs and regeneration of new trees, such as red and white pine. Jack pine and upland black spruce both utilize heat from fire to melt resin that locks seeds inside cones. Once fire burns through an area the cones open and release their seeds. Aspen and birch are easily killed by fire, but are adapted to fire as they are able to persist after a burn. The seeds of both species are easily transported by wind to distant sites. Aspen also re-sprouts up to 100 feet from the original tree via the roots, and birch may re-sprout from the root collar at the base of the original tree.
The response of wildlife to fire varies by species; however, fire is essential to maintaining wildlife habitats in the long term. Most animals will sense fire and move away from approaching flames. Small mammals often escape fire by moving to areas outside the burn, unburned pockets within the fire, or retreating to burrows underground. The rejuvenating effects of fire attract different wildlife at different times as trees and vegetation re-emerge. Woodpeckers are attracted to beetles that thrive on the fire killed trees soon after a burn. Snowshoe hare numbers often peak in the first 10-15 years after a fire and berry production increases within a few years after fire and will attract many birds.