Skip to content
928.523.7182 | General Inquiries | Web Inquiries | Subscribe To Our E-News
FacebookInstagramBlueskyYouTubeLinkedIn
Ecological Restoration Institute Logo Ecological Restoration Institute Logo Ecological Restoration Institute Logo
  • About
    • Annual Reports and Work Plans
    • Staff Directory
    • Employment Opportunities
    • SWERI Visme Presentation
    • ERI Video: Shifting paradigms in Forest Restoration
  • Research
    • Landscape Monitoring and Research
    • Long-term Ecological Assessment and Restoration Network (LEARN)
    • Wildfire Effects
      • Flagstaff Fire History Map
    • Ponderosa Pine Ecosystem
    • Mixed Conifer Ecosystem
    • Pinyon-Juniper Ecosystem
    • Social and Economic Research
    • Best Available Scientific Information (BASI)
  • Forest Operations & Biomass
    • Forest Restoration and Fuel Reduction Operations
      • ThinCost 1.0: A spreadsheet-based model to estimate thinning costs
      • In-woods Mobile Processing
      • Biomass Disposal
    • Workforce Training and Development
    • SWERI Wood Utilization Team Includes:
      • Business Clusters and Markets
      • Chip-and-Ship Project
  • Science Outreach
  • Tribal Forest Restoration Program
    • Wood For Life
  • Publications
  • Media and Blogs
    • Media
    • Communities In Action
    • Science Flash Blog
    • Field Notes Blog
    • Before and After Photos
  • About
    • Annual Reports and Work Plans
    • Staff Directory
    • Employment Opportunities
    • SWERI Visme Presentation
    • ERI Video: Shifting paradigms in Forest Restoration
  • Research
    • Landscape Monitoring and Research
    • Long-term Ecological Assessment and Restoration Network (LEARN)
    • Wildfire Effects
      • Flagstaff Fire History Map
    • Ponderosa Pine Ecosystem
    • Mixed Conifer Ecosystem
    • Pinyon-Juniper Ecosystem
    • Social and Economic Research
    • Best Available Scientific Information (BASI)
  • Forest Operations & Biomass
    • Forest Restoration and Fuel Reduction Operations
      • ThinCost 1.0: A spreadsheet-based model to estimate thinning costs
      • In-woods Mobile Processing
      • Biomass Disposal
    • Workforce Training and Development
    • SWERI Wood Utilization Team Includes:
      • Business Clusters and Markets
      • Chip-and-Ship Project
  • Science Outreach
  • Tribal Forest Restoration Program
    • Wood For Life
  • Publications
  • Media and Blogs
    • Media
    • Communities In Action
    • Science Flash Blog
    • Field Notes Blog
    • Before and After Photos
Previous Next
  • View Larger Image

Science Flash June 2021: Lines of Evidence: How Reconstructing Historical Fire Regimes Informs Current and Future Forest Management

The 2020 wildfire season set records across the western US. Scientists expect climate change to exacerbate severe wildfires with increasing temperatures and drought conditions. Add to the mix dense forests full of excess trees and fuels from more than a century of fire exclusion, and the need for action is strikingly clear.

A large body of scientific evidence indicates that modern-day wildfires, which are uncharacteristically large and severe, are not consistent with historical fire regimes and pose one of the greatest threats to native dry western forest ecosystems. To better understand the role fi​re can play in forests today, researchers and managers have found it useful to reconstruct attributes of historical ​fire regimes before the onset of fi​re exclusion.

In 2014, ERI published a working paper by Larissa Y. Kent that evaluated methods for reconstructing fire regimes to help land managers meet their particular research or resource goals. The working paper discussed several methods for reconstructing historical fi​re regimes and evaluated their advantages, disadvantages, inherent uncertainties, assumptions, and temporal and spatial precision:

  • Historical documents and photos
  • Dendrochronology: ​fire scar data
  • Dendrochronology: tree age, death and growth data
  • Forest structure data
  • Plant traits
  • Charcoal

Information about past fi​re regimes can be a helpful reference to guide and inform land managers about current and future fire regime characteristics, patterns, and forest structure characteristics. Management activities that benefit from understanding past ​fire regimes include prescribed fi​re, managed wild​fires for resource benefi​t, and mechanical treatments to reduce fire risk.

READ THE WORKING PAPER

Left: Evidence of large, severe fire in spruce and aspen forests, San Francisco Peaks, near Flagstaff, AZ, 1910. Right: Grasslands and scattered juniper trees, Reserve Valley, Apache National Forest, 1923. Source: fs.usda.gov

2021-06-14T19:52:01+00:00June 14th, 2021|Science Flash|

Share This Story

FacebookXRedditLinkedInWhatsAppTumblrPinterestVkEmail

Related Posts

Science Flash – February 2025
Science Flash – February 2025
Gallery

Science Flash – February 2025

Science Flash – January 2025
Science Flash – January 2025
Gallery

Science Flash – January 2025

Science Flash – November 2024
Science Flash – November 2024
Gallery

Science Flash – November 2024

Blog Categories

  • Before and After
  • Ecology
  • ERI Employment Opportunities
  • Field Notes
  • Forest Operations – Biomass
  • Human Dimensions
  • Museum Fire
  • Native American Forest and Rangeland Management Program
  • News
  • Policy and Communications
  • Science Delivery
  • Science Flash
  • Staff in the News
  • Tribal Forestry Student Summit Blog
  • upcoming events

Media Links

  • Media FAQ
  • Media Gallery
  • Media Contact
Ecological Restoration Institute White Logo

Contact Information

  • Mailing Address:
    PO Box 15017
    Flagstaff AZ 86011

  • Physical Address:
    Northern Arizona University Southwest Forest Science Complex (Bldg #82)

  • 928.523.7182

Subscribe

ERI E-Newsletter Signup

Publications

  • Library
  • Recent ERI Publications
  • Recent Journal Publications
  • Fact Sheets
  • White Papers
  • Working Papers
  • General and Technical Reports

Pages

  • About Us
  • Employment Opportunities
  • ERI Video: Shifting paradigms in Forest Restoration
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Native American Forest and Rangeland Management Program
  • Research
  • Restoration and Fuel Reduction Operations
  • Science Outreach

Recent Posts

  • A Legacy of Mentorship: Don Normandin Retires from NAU’s Ecological Restoration Institute April 29, 2025
  • Science Flash – February 2025 April 2, 2025
  • Science Flash – January 2025 April 2, 2025
Northern Arizona University sits at the base of the San Francisco Peaks, on homelands sacred to Native Americans throughout the region.
We honor their past, present, and future generations, who have lived here for millennia and will forever call this place home.

NAU is an equal opportunity provider.
ERI's research is funded by many sources, including the USDA Forest Service and the AZ Board of Regents through the Technology, Research and Innovation Fund (TRIF).



© Copyright    |   Ecological Restoration Institute    |   All Rights Reserved   |   Site Design by Shine Creative Industries
FacebookInstagramBlueskyYouTubeLinkedIn
Page load link
Go to Top