Yosemite’s Burned Areas Are Alive

Yosemite’s Burned Areas Are Alive

- by Chad Han­son, Octo­ber 3, 2013. SourceLos Ange­les Times

It was entire­ly pre­dictable. Even before the ash­es have cooled on the 257,000-acre Rim fire in and around Yosemite this year, the tim­ber indus­try and its allies in Con­gress were using the fire as an excuse for sus­pend­ing envi­ron­men­tal laws and expand­ing log­ging oper­a­tions on fed­er­al land.

“The Yosemite Rim fire is a tragedy that has destroyed 400 square miles of our forests,” said Rep. Tom McClin­tock (R‑Elk Grove) in announc­ing a bill he intro­duced late last month that would expe­dite mas­sive tax­pay­er-sub­si­dized clear-cut­ting on fed­er­al pub­lic lands in the fire area. “If any good can come of this tragedy, it would be the time­ly sal­vage of fire-killed tim­ber that could pro­vide employ­ment to local mills and des­per­ate­ly need­ed eco­nom­ic activ­i­ty to moun­tain communities.”

But McClin­tock­’s rea­son­ing is flawed. Mas­sive clear-cut­ting now would inflict sig­nif­i­cant dam­age and negate the many eco­log­i­cal ben­e­fits that fire brings.

Ecol­o­gists agree that the post-fire habi­tat cre­at­ed by patch­es of high-inten­si­ty fire, known as “snag for­est habi­tat,” is one of the most eco­log­i­cal­ly impor­tant of all for­est habi­tat types, and it sup­ports lev­els of native bio­di­ver­si­ty and wildlife abun­dance equal to or greater than unburned old-growth for­est. More­over, snag for­est habi­tat is even rar­er than old-growth for­est, and is more threat­ened by com­mer­cial log­ging than any oth­er for­est type.

Will the land look the same as it did before the fire? Of course not. But post-fire snag for­est habi­tat is impor­tant to the reju­ve­na­tion of the area’s ecol­o­gy, which will begin next spring. Stand­ing dead trees, or “snags,” pro­vide habi­tat for the lar­vae of native wood-bor­ing bee­tles, upon which wood­peck­ers depend for food. The wood­peck­ers dig out nest cav­i­ties in the dead trees — a new one each year — cre­at­ing homes for many oth­er cav­i­ty-nest­ing species, like the moun­tain blue­bird, that can­not cre­ate their own nest holes. The native flow­er­ing shrubs that ger­mi­nate after high-inten­si­ty fire attract an abun­dance of fly­ing insects, includ­ing bees, but­ter­flies, moths and drag­on­flies, and this pro­vides food for many bat and bird species, espe­cial­ly fly­catch­ers. Rap­tors such as goshawks and spot­ted owls active­ly hunt in snag for­est habi­tat because of the high den­si­ty of small mam­mal prey in the native shrubs and downed logs. Deer hap­pi­ly browse on the nat­ur­al post-fire conifer regen­er­a­tion and shrubs, and bears feed on the rich crop of berries in snag for­est habitat.

The black-backed wood­peck­er, in par­tic­u­lar, depends on large patch­es high-inten­si­ty fire occur­ring in areas of dense, mature conifer for­est — gen­er­al­ly requir­ing at least 200 to 300 acres per pair. Because of a dra­mat­ic loss of snag for­est habi­tat from decades of fire sup­pres­sion, post-fire clear-cut­ting and inten­sive for­est “thin­ning” oper­a­tions, in April the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Ser­vice issued a deter­mi­na­tion that the sub­species of the black-backed wood­peck­er that lives in the Sier­ra Neva­da and east­ern Ore­gon Cas­cades may need to be list­ed under the Endan­gered Species Act to pre­vent extinc­tion. This species is a man­age­ment indi­ca­tor species, or bell­wether, for a much larg­er group of wildlife species that depends upon snag for­est habi­tat — a canary in the coal mine, so to speak.

Despite many dozens of sci­en­tif­ic stud­ies estab­lish­ing that high-inten­si­ty fire patch­es cre­ate per­haps the best wildlife habi­tat in the for­est, the tim­ber indus­try, its allies in Con­gress and the U.S. For­est Ser­vice con­tin­ue to pro­mote aggres­sive post-fire log­ging. An obscure law known as the Sal­vage Sale Fund allows the U.S. For­est Ser­vice to keep 100% of the rev­enue from sell­ing pub­lic tim­ber to log­ging cor­po­ra­tions after fires, cre­at­ing a pow­er­ful per­verse incen­tive to ignore cur­rent sci­ence, short­cut envi­ron­men­tal laws and pro­mote huge clear-cut­ting oper­a­tions on fed­er­al pub­lic lands after fires.

For­est fires cur­rent­ly burn most­ly at low and mod­er­ate inten­si­ty, and the Rim fire is no excep­tion, with only 30% of the conifer for­est expe­ri­enc­ing high-inten­si­ty fire on fed­er­al lands. And even in high-inten­si­ty fire areas with­in forests, the largest conifers often sur­vive and help regen­er­ate new trees. But accord­ing to numer­ous sci­en­tif­ic stud­ies, the high­est wildlife abun­dance and species rich­ness are often found in the spots that burned the hottest, where it takes regen­er­at­ing conifers the longest amount of time to replace the col­or­ful native flow­er­ing shrubs and stand­ing snags. Though mis­un­der­stood, and unfair­ly maligned by Rep. McClin­tock, this post-fire habi­tat is both nat­ur­al and eco­log­i­cal­ly desirable.

The ques­tion is this: Can we, as a soci­ety, col­lec­tive­ly take a breath and con­sid­er the new eco­log­i­cal sci­ence, or will we once again let fear, igno­rance and greedy oppor­tunism dic­tate for­est man­age­ment? The sur­vival of the black-backed wood­peck­er depends on the answer.

Chad Han­son is a for­est and fire ecol­o­gist with the John Muir Project of Earth Island Insti­tute. He is based in the San Bernardi­no moun­tains. http://www.johnmuirproject.org.


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