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Pyrosilviculture Needed for Landscape Resilience of Dry Western United States Forests
Author(s) -
Malcolm P. North,
R.A. York,
Brandon M. Collins,
Matthew D. Hurteau,
Gavin M. Jones,
Eric E. Knapp,
Leda N. Kobziar,
Henry McCann,
Marc D. Meyer,
Scott L. Stephens,
Ryan E. Tompkins,
Carmen L. Tubbesing
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of forestry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.636
H-Index - 74
eISSN - 1938-3746
pISSN - 0022-1201
DOI - 10.1093/jofore/fvab026
Subject(s) - thinning , ecosystem services , resilience (materials science) , environmental resource management , pace , disturbance (geology) , ecosystem , scale (ratio) , environmental science , psychological resilience , business , revenue , asset (computer security) , climate change , agroforestry , forestry , geography , ecology , computer science , cartography , psychology , paleontology , physics , geodesy , psychotherapist , biology , thermodynamics , accounting , computer security
A significant increase in treatment pace and scale is needed to restore dry western US forest resilience owing to increasingly frequent and severe wildfire and drought. We propose a pyrosilviculture approach to directly increase large-scale fire use and modify current thinning treatments to optimize future fire incorporation. Recommendations include leveraging wildfire’s “treatment” in areas burned at low and moderate severity with subsequent pyrosilviculture management, identifying managed wildfire zones, and facilitating and financing prescribed fire with “anchor,” “ecosystem asset,” and “revenue” focused thinning treatments. Pyrosilviculture would also expand prescribed-burn and managed-wildfire objectives to include reducing stand density, increasing forest heterogeneity, and selecting for tree species and phenotypes better adapted to changing climate and disturbance regimes. The potential benefits and limitations of this approach are discussed. Fire is inevitable in dry western US forests and pyrosilviculture focuses on proactively shifting more of that fire into managed large-scale burns needed to restore ecosystem resilience.

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