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Review of fuel treatment effectiveness in forests and rangelands and a case study from the 2007 megafires in central, Idaho, USA
Author(s) -
Andrew T. Hudak,
Ian Rickert,
Penelope Morgan,
Eva K. Strand,
Sarah A. Lewis,
Peter R. Robichaud,
Chad Hoffman,
Zachary A. Holden
Publication year - 2011
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2737/rmrs-gtr-252
Subject(s) - slash (logging) , rangeland , thinning , environmental science , forestry , geography , environmental resource management , environmental protection , agroforestry
This report provides managers with the current state of knowledge regarding the effectiveness of fuel treatments for mitigating severe wildfire effects. A literature review examines the effectiveness of fuel treatments that had been previously applied and were subsequently burned through by wildfire in forests and rangelands. A case study focuses on WUI fuel treatments that were burned in the 2007 East Zone and Cascade megafires in central Idaho. Both the literature review and case study results support a manager consensus that forest thinning followed by some form of slash removal is most effective for reducing subsequent wildfire severity.

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