Fire Protection Principles and Recommendations in Disturbed Forest Areas in Central Europe: A Review

Author:

Berčák Roman1ORCID,Holuša Jaroslav1ORCID,Kaczmarowski Jan2,Tyburski Łukasz3ORCID,Szczygieł Ryszard3,Held Alexander4,Vacik Harald5ORCID,Slivinský Ján6,Chromek Ivan7

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Forestry and Wood Sciences, Czech University of Life Sciences Prague, 16500 Prague, Czech Republic

2. General Directorate of the State Forests, 02124 Warsaw, Poland

3. Laboratory of Forest Fire Protection, Forest Research Institute, 05090 Raszyn, Poland

4. European Forest Institute, 53113 Bonn, Germany

5. Institute of Silviculture, Department of Forest and Soil Sciences, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, 1180 Vienna, Austria

6. High Tatras National Park, 06201 Tatranská Lomnica, Slovakia

7. Faculty of Wood Sciences and Technology, Technical University in Zvolen, 96001 Zvolen, Slovakia

Abstract

Forest fires are becoming a more significant problem in Central Europe, but their danger is not as high as that in Southern Europe. The exception, however, is forest fires occurring in disturbed areas (windthrow and bark beetle outbreak areas), which are comparable in severity and danger to the most serious forest fires. In this study, we describe the current situation in Central European countries in terms of fire protection for disturbed areas in managed forests and forest stands left to spontaneously develop (secondary succession). If a country has regulations and strategies in this area, they are often only published in the local language. In this review, we combine information from all Central European countries and summarize it in a unified international language, provide an opportunity for local authorities to express their own experiences, and integrate data from worldwide scientific research. Thus, this paper may be considered a universal guide for managing fire protection and preparedness in disturbed areas and can serve as a reference for the establishment of strict legislative rules at the state level. These laws must be obligatory for all stakeholders in individual countries. The motivation for this study was two large forest fires in an area left to spontaneously develop in the Bohemian Switzerland National Park in the Czech Republic and Harz Mountains in Germany in the summer of 2022. These incidents revealed that fire prevention legislation was inadequate or nonexistent in these areas. The strategy of the European Union is to increase the size of protected areas and spontaneous development areas. Therefore, we consider it necessary to provide governments with relevant information on this topic to create conditions for better management of these destructive events.

Funder

Czech University of Life Sciences

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Safety Research,Environmental Science (miscellaneous),Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality,Building and Construction,Forestry

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