Overcoming obstacles to prescribed fire in the North American Mediterranean climate zone

Author:

Williams John N1,Quinn‐Davidson Lenya2,Safford Hugh D13,Grupenhoff Ashley1,Middleton Beth Rose4,Restaino Joe5,Smith Edward6,Adlam Chris7,Rivera‐Huerta Hiram8

Affiliation:

1. Department of Environmental Science & Policy University of California–Davis Davis CA

2. University of California Agriculture and Natural Resources Eureka CA

3. Vibrant Planet Incline Village NV

4. Department of Native American Studies University of California–Davis Davis CA

5. Fire and Resource Assessment Program California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection Sacramento CA

6. The Nature Conservancy Sacramento CA

7. Forestry and Natural Resources Extension Fire Program Oregon State University Central Point OR

8. Faculty of Marine Sciences Autonomous University of Baja California Ensenada Mexico

Abstract

Prescribed fire is an important management tool for restoring fire‐adapted ecosystems and mitigating the risk of high‐severity wildfire in the North American Mediterranean climate zone (NAMCZ), much of which was historically characterized by frequent low‐ to moderate‐severity fire. For over a century, policies that excluded fire, curtailed Indigenous cultural burning, and prioritized timber harvesting have, in combination with anthropogenic climate warming, driven large‐scale, high‐severity fires that are wreaking ecological and socioeconomic havoc. Despite its recognized need, the use of prescribed fire at appropriate scale has been slow to occur. We describe some of the principal obstacles to increasing the application of prescribed fire in the NAMCZ and suggest four strategies for policy makers and high‐level managers to overcome them: (1) redoubling federal and state agency commitment and rewarding assertive leadership, (2) increasing funding for prevention‐focused management (as opposed to suppression), (3) building capacity through cooperation, and (4) expanding monitoring to inform burn strategies and adaptive management.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference60 articles.

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