Author:
Hann Wendel J.,Bunnell David L.
Abstract
This paper was presented at the conference ‘Integrating spatial technologies and ecological principles for a new age in fire management’, Boise, Idaho, USA, June 1999
Ecosystem conditions on Federal public lands have changed, particularly within
the last 30 years. Wildfires in the west have increased to levels close to or
above those estimated for historical conditions, despite increasing efforts
and expertise in fire prevention and suppression capability. To reverse these
trends, planning for fire and land management policies, budgets, and
restoration must address multiple decision levels (national, regional, local,
and project) and incorporate an improved understanding of conditions and their
linkage across these scales. Three fundamental issues are identified and
discussed that relate to traditional types of planning and the associated lack
of achievement of multi-scale integrated resource and fire objectives. Various
examples of planning that address these three fundamental issues at different
scales are compared to traditional types of planning. Outcomes predicted for
an example national scale landscape dynamics model are used to illustrate the
differences between three different multi-scale management scenarios.
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