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Friends of

CRATER LAKE NATIONAL PARK
Volume 7 No. 1 * Winter 2002

RESTORING FIRE TO CRATER LAKE NATIONAL PARK
by David Brennan, Chief Ranger

The lower slopes of Timber Crater, in the northeast corner of the park, are home to ponderosa pine forests that thrive in this relatively dry climate. Research into these forests tells us that they have historically undergone fairly frequent, lightning-caused fires of low intensity, with approximately eight to twenty-five years between fires. By favoring the reproduction of ponderosa pines over shade-tolerant species such as white fir, this produced relatively open forests of large, magnificent ponderosa pines, and relatively little undergrowth.

Since the early part of the twentieth century, man has been suppressing these fires. By doing so, we have seriously disrupted the natural role of fire in these ponderosa pine forest ecosystems. Fire suppression began in the early part of this century and has led to unnatural fuel buildups that increase the risk of catastrophic wildfires. As naturally occurring fires were suppressed, the number small trees increased dramatically, and shade-tolerant trees such as white fir became much more prevalent. Forests such as these, with heavy fuel loads and "ladder fuels" that allow the rapid spread of fire from the ground to the tree canopy, are a symptom that the natural fire process has been significantly altered.

Ponderosa pine forest
Ponderosa Pine Forest at Crater Lake

The core mission of the National Park Service is to preserve and protect natural features and natural processes such as fire. At Crater Lake National Park, one of our long-term goals is to restore the natural role of fire in park ecosystems. We are also committed to reducing the likelihood of catastrophic wildfires that threaten people and property.

Because the natural role of fire has been disrupted for so many years, the reintroduction of natural fire requires several incremental steps, one of which is prescribed fire. In late September and early October of 2001, we conducted a prescribed fire on 630 acres of ponderosa pine forest in the Timber Crater area. This fire was ignited under a careful prescription - a combination of temperature, relative humidity, wind speed and fuel moisture which helps ensure the desired results.

We planned and conducted this fire under the new National Park Service prescribed fire policies, which were adopted after the catastrophic fire of 2001 in Los Alamos, New Mexico. These policies require park managers to rigorously address issues of risk and complexity, with several levels of review, so the benefits of prescribed fire can be accomplished with minimal risk to life and property. Not only must we have enough fire personnel present to safely ignite, monitor and manage the fire, but we also must have sufficient firefighters present to quickly suppress the fire should it escape the intended burn area. While this greatly increases the complexity and cost of prescribed burns, it assures park managers, park neighbors and the general public that we have taken all reasonable steps to prevent a potentially destructive escaped fire from occurring.

So...how successful were we? Time will tell. Our fire effects monitoring program began as the fire was burning, and will continue for a number of years to measure how well we accomplished our desired results. We then use this information refine the prescription for the next fire. Through this adaptive management process, our long-term goal is to determine the regime of prescribed fires and naturally occurring fires that preserve the forest as a healthy, naturally functioning system that can be enjoyed by future generations of park visitors.


briefing
Briefign before the prescribe burn

fire personnel
Fire personnel needed for prescribed burning

planning
Planning and working out the details

prescribed burn
The Prescribed Burn

holding crew
Holding Crew

unnatural fuel buildup
Unnatural fuel buildup

portable water tank
Portable water tank used on forest fires

ignition
Igniting prescribed fire

smoke
Column of smoke from prescribed fire


Friends of CRATER LAKE NATIONAL PARK * Volume 7 No. 1 * Winter 2002

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