Measuring bushfire fuels is important to many different people for so many different reasons;

Calculating the likely success of first attack; prioritising fuel reduction treatments; figuring out optimum fire frequency; calculating fuel accumulation rates; assessing risks and hazards; measuring carbon release; estimating smoke production (to name a few).

This project poses questions to those interested in fire fuels: Why collect fuels data? What do we seek to learn from fuels data? Should we collect fuels data across Australia in a uniform way? How would we store the information? What are the gaps in the knowledge about fuels? and more...

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Point Reyes National Seashore

We met fire ecologist and University of California Berkeley PhD candidate, Alison Forrestal at Point Reyes National Seashore (US National Park Service). Alison toured us around the park to look at areas where prescribed fire (Rx fire) had been implemented in chaparral fuels as well as areas of mastication (mechanical hazard reduction) in the understory of redwood forests that aimed to create strategic breaks and trail access in the event of a wildfire. (So far it seems the use of mastication is much more common than Rx burning as a way to reduce bushfire fuels).

We also inspected a redwood/tanoak forest affected by the plant pathogen Phytophthora ramorum, also known as Sudden Oak Death. This infectious disease was identified in California the mid 1990’s and has caused substantial mortality in tanoak and several oak tree species. The name Sudden Oak death is appropriate as once an oak is infected through the trunk and the leaves in the case of tanoak, the tree dies relatively quickly. Other tree species are affected by this pathogen including Douglas-fir and coast redwood that may not die but can act as hosts. The death of the oak trees is expected to significantly increase the dead fuel load in the forest. In order to monitor the changes in fuel loads, permanent fuels monitoring sites have been set up in the affected forest using Brown's method in the ‘Monitoring Dead and Downed Fuel Loads’ described in the National Park Service Fire Monitoring Handbook.

The park, and the surrounding area are widely populated by many large stands of eucalypt trees (mainly Eucalyptus globulus – Blue Gum) introduced from Australia in the 1850's during the Californian gold rush.  Eucalypts here grow vigorously given the Mediterranean climate – warm, dry summers and cool rainy winters. Park fire management staff are grappling with the issues related to managing increased fuels from this introduced plant. Other current issues relating to monitoring and managing fuels include the increasing array of models available for predicting fire behaviour, the efficacy of such models and the issue of extrapolating data for use in fire behaviour models. Sounds familiar!


Thanks Alison!






A weekend on the Monterey coast

Finding our way out of San Francisco

The Monterey Coast

Eucalyptus Globulus on Cannery Row in Monterey - and they are everywhere in California!

E. globulus capsules

Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park - recovering from a fire in 2008

Sequoia sempervirons
Smoky Bear - a US icon - of late implicated in causing confusion about the role of fire in natural ecosystems

Monday, June 27, 2011

The Hopland Heath Experiement

I met with Dr Scott Stephens from the University of California, Berkeley to look at the ‘Hopland Heath Experiment’. Hopland is a tiny village in the northern third of California, about 2 hours NW of San Francisco named for its history of growing hops. Nowadays Hopland is known for its wine, and for the University of California, Berkeley's Research & Extension Center, where the experiment was undertaken.

This study done in Chaparral* fuels aimed to look at the opportunities for expanding prescribed fire outside the traditional season of spring, to see if the heath was adversely affected by changing the time of year burning was undertaken. An experimental plot was also masticated (complete mechanical vegetation removal) to measure and compare the effects on biodiversity.

*In California heathlands are also known as Chaparral.

Scott and co-author Jennifer Potts found that burning (once) during seasons other than the traditional spring season had no appreciable detriment to the assemblage of plant species extant in the plots. In fact they found that a significant number of species regenerated after one fire treatment. Interestingly they found that mastication immediately promoted the growth of weeds. Scott reported the cost of mastication worked out at about $1000 per hectare, so it was a very expensive option as a broadscale treatment. Further work is required to determine how native and non-native plant species fare after repeated fire treatments.

For more information read the paper:

Invasive and native plant responses to shrubland fuel reduction: comparing prescribed fire, mastication, and treatment season
Jennifer B. Potts, Scott L. Stephens * Division of Ecosystem Science, Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720-3114, USA

Thanks Dr Scott! 
(sorry about the wind noise - hence the sub-titles)





Friday, June 17, 2011

My Itinerary


23-Jun-11
San Francisco
University of California Berkeley
Scott Stephens - Associate Professor of Fire Sciences
24-Jun-11


Scott Stephens - Hopland heath experiment
25-Jun-11
Monterey


26-Jun-11
Monterey


27-Jun-11
Point Reyes
Point Reyes National Seashore
Alison Forrestel -Fire Ecologist - Eucalypt Bluegum fuels
28-Jun-11
San Luis Obispo

29-Jun-11
San Luis Obispo
California Polytechnic State University
Chris Dicus - Wildland Fire and Fuels Program
30-Jun-11
San Luis Obispo
Chris Dicus - Wildland urban interface
1-Jul-11
San Luis Obispo
Chris Dicus - Wildland urban interface
2-Jul-11



3-Jul-11



4-Jul-11
Three Rivers
PUBLIC HOLIDAY
5-Jul-11
Three Rivers
Ash Mountain - Park headquarters Sequoia / Kings Canyon NP
Tony Caprio - Fire Ecologist
6-Jul-11
Three Rivers
USGS
Jon Keeley - Research scientist
7-Jul-11
Grand Canyon

8-Jul-11
Grand Canyon
Grand Canyon village - Park Headquarters South Rim
Windy Bunn - Dry Ponderosa Pine fuels
9-Jul-11
Grand Canyon
Windy Bunn - Dry Ponderosa Pine fuels
10-Jul-11
Painted Desert

11-Jul-11
Flagstaff
1824 South Thompson St Flagstaff - US Forest Service Office
Linda Wadleigh - Firel Ecologist
12-Jul-11
Flagstaff

Linda Wadleigh - Fuel sampling US Forest Service
13-Jul-11
Jackson


14-Jul-11
Jackson
Grand Tetons NP Visitors Centre - Moose…
Diane Abendroth - Fire ecologist
15-Jul-11
Jackson

Diane Abendroth - Fire ecologist
16-Jul-11
Jackson


17-Jul-11
Seattle


18-Jul-11
Seattle
Pacific Wildland Fire Sciences Laboratory
Bob Vihnanek - Program lead Research Support Team
19-Jul-11
Seattle
400 N. 34th St. Suite201
Bob Vihnanek - Photo series fuel recording
20-Jul-11
Seattle
Seattle, WA. 98103
Susan Pritchard - Fire Ecologist FCCS
21-Jul-11
Seattle

Roger Ottmar - Research Forester
22-Jul-11
Seattle

Roger Ottmar - Fuel Characterisic Classification System
23-Jul-11
Seattle


24-Jul-11
Boise


25-Jul-11
Boise
National Interagency Fire Center
Bill Kaage - National Fire Mgt Officer NPS
26-Jul-11
Boise

Dick Bahr - Fire Science & Ecology Program Lead NPS
27-Jul-11
Missoula


28-Jul-11
Missoula
RMRS Fire Science Laboratory
Jim Reardon - Forester
29-Jul-11
Missoula
RMRS Fire Science Laboratory
Bob Keane - Research Ecologist
30-Jul-11
Missoula
National Center for Landscape Fire Analysis
Carl Seilestad - Fire & Fuels Program Manager
31-Jul-11
Lake Louise


1-Aug-11
Lake Louise


2-Aug-11
Lake Louise
Banff Warden Office
Jane Park - Fire/Vegetation Specialist
3-Aug-11
Lake Louise
Parks Canada Agency
Jane Park - Banff Fire Program Burn planning


Sunday, June 5, 2011

Trip Preparations


"If I had eight hours to chop down a tree, I'd spend six sharpening my axe."
— Abraham Lincoln

My 'six hours' are disappearing at an alarming rate right now. Just 14 days til we leave.