Benefits/Tradeoffs of Fuel Control Treatments

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FUNDED BY: GNLCC efits/tradeoffs of fuel control treatm What we have learned from SageSTEP so far Bruce Roundy and Jim McIver

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Benefits/Tradeoffs of Fuel Control Treatments

Transcript of Benefits/Tradeoffs of Fuel Control Treatments

Page 1: Benefits/Tradeoffs of Fuel Control Treatments

FUNDED BY:

GNLCC

Benefits/tradeoffs of fuel control treatmentsWhat we have learned from SageSTEP so far

Bruce Roundy and Jim McIver

Page 2: Benefits/Tradeoffs of Fuel Control Treatments

COLLABORATORS

Page 3: Benefits/Tradeoffs of Fuel Control Treatments

Great Basin Biomes

Forest

WoodlandSage-Cheat

Salt Desert Shrub

Annual Precipitation

4’’ 12’’ 24’’

SageSTEP: Two Experiments

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Wildfire is managing the landscape

1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 20100

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Extensive and intensive research

Shred study

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Treatments: Sagebrush SteppeSage-Cheat Experiment

Prescribed fire

Mowing

Herbicide – Tebuthiuron (Spike 20P) applied aerially

Control

Plateau pre-emergence herbicide (applied by hand-spraying) crossed with all four treatments for cheatgrass control.

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Treatments Woodland Experiment

Prescribed fire Chainsaw Cutting

Bull Hog (in Utah only)

Control

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Prescribed Fire

SageSTEP: Multivariate

Social Acceptance

Economics

Soil Carbon

Runoff & Erosion

Sage-Obligate Birds

Insect Biodiversity

Vegetation

Fuels, Fire Behavior

Page 9: Benefits/Tradeoffs of Fuel Control Treatments

Initial 3-year resultsSpecial open source issue- September 2014

• 13 articles• Introduction and synopsis• 4 vegetation response• 3 soils, hydrology• 1 butterflies• 1 birds• 1 remote sensing, image

analysis• 1 social acceptance and

public trust

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Sage-cheat fuels

• Fire and mowing reduced woody fuels• Herb. fuels decreased then rebounded

Pyke et al. 2014 REM

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Woodland fuels

Prescribed fire

Wildfire

Mechanical

Wildfire

Wildfire

Cut and drop

Shred

Courtesy Brad Jessop

Page 12: Benefits/Tradeoffs of Fuel Control Treatments

Treatment fuel effects

1 hr 10 hr 100 hr 1000 hr0

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30% Pretreatment Tree Cover

Untreated or CutBurnShred

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Young et al 2014 IJWLF

Fuel size classes

Diameter (mm)1 hr ≤ 610 hr 6-25100 hr 26-761000 hr >76

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Avoiding wildfire damage after mechanical treatments may require prescribed fire

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Cover

loss

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)

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Stansbury cover loss (%) 1 year after Big Pole fire

Roundy unpublished

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Sage-cheat vegetation response• Fire reduced tall

grass biomass first year, then recovered

• Imazapic decreased cheatgrass and perennial grass cover for 3 years

• Sandy soil, lower whc associated with cheatgrass

• Concern for grass under shrubs and fire

Pyke et al. 2014 REM Reisner et al 2013 JAERau et al. 2014 REM

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Resilience theory and practice-expanded woodlands

From Briske et al. 2008. http://jornada.nmsu.edu/sites/default/files/briskeSRM08.pdf

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Pre-treatment vegetation

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 800

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Herbaceous biomass (kg/ha)

Tree cover (%)

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Tree cover (%)

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Relative cover (%)

CheatgrassForbShortTallShrubTree

Tree dominance index

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Shrub cover

0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 10

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ControlBurnCut

Tree dominance index

Sh

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Tree dominance index

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Roundy et al 2014 REM (3rd year results)

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Residual trees and sagebrush seedlings

Sagebrushseedlings

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Sagebrush seedlings/m2

ControlBurnCut

Years since treatment

Miller et al. 2014 REM (3rd year results)

Bybee et al submitted

Untreated Shred Shred-seed0

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Sagebrush seedlings/m2

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Perennial herbaceous cover

0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 10

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ControlBurnCut

Tree dominance index

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Tree dominance index

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Roundy et al 2014 REM (3rd year results)

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Cheatgrass cover

0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 10

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Tree dominance index

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ControlBurnCut

Tree dominance index

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Roundy et al 2014 REM (3rd year results)

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Shredding increases cheatgrass cover; seeding suppresses it

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Tree cover (%)

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Bybee et al submitted

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Tree reduction increases soil water, N and P resources

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Roundy et al. 2014 REM 4th year results

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Shredding increased:

• Time of soil water availability and temperatures

• Inorganic N

• Seedling biomass

Mound Interspace Mound Interspace Mound Interspace Mound Interspace0

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Untreated Masticated

Spring-Summer Summer-Fall Winter All Seasons

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rgan

ic N

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g m

-2 4

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Young et al. 2013FEM

Young et al. 2013REM

Roundy et al. 2014 REM

Young et al. 2014AESS

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Treatment Effects on Available NitrogenTreeless Sagebrush Steppe

Rau et al. 2011. Transition from sagebrush steppe to annual influence on belowground carbon and nitrogen. Rangeland Ecology and Management 64:139-147

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Percent of Potential Tree Cover

Percent of Potential Tree Cover

Carbon Management:Sequestration?

Tradeoff w/Vegetation?Rau, B.M. et al. 2012. Journal of Arid Environments 76:97-104.

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Pierson, F.B. et al. 2010. Rangeland Ecology and Management 63:614-629. Pierson, F.B., et al. 2013.  Rangeland Ecology and Management 66:274-289.

Williams, C.J., et al. 2013. Ecohydrology, doi: 10.1002/eco.1364

Hydrology

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Hydrology• Erosion was site-

specific• Shredded mulch

reduced erosion• Interspace grass

recovery is key

Pierson et al. 2014 REM

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Object-based image analysis accurately estimates:

• Canopy fuels using NAIP imagery Hulet et al. 2014 REM

• Treated fuels using high resolution 0.06-m pixel color IR Hulet et al 2014 EM

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Woodland Ecotone SagebrushBird Community

OnaquiMechanical tree reduction supported sagebrush

birds

Knick et al 2014REM

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McIver and Macke 2014REM

Butterfly response

• Diversity increased with treatment

• Melissa blue increase associated with increased nectar for larvae

• Juniper hairstreak declined

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Public Acceptance and Trust

Shindler et al. 2011. Rangeland Ecology and Management 64:335–343.Gordon et al. 2014. Public priorities for rangeland management: A

longitudinal panel study of residents in the Great Basin. Rangeland Ecology and Management, in review.

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Onaqui CUT

Pre-Cut -- 2006 Post-Cut -- 2007

Post-Cut -- 2009

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Immediately Post-fire

Longer-term Effects? – Stay Tuned

Re-measurement scheduled for 2015.

6 Yr Post-fire

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Tradeoffs

• Imazapic reduces cheatgrass and p. grass• Fire reduces fuels but increases cheatgrass and

erosion• Mechanical treatments maintain shrubs,

increase perennial herbaceous, decrease erosion (shredding), but keep fuels, future tree reduction needed

• Near complete tree reduction supports sagebrush birds near open sagebrush

• Perennial grasses are key to resilience• What will site analyses tell us?

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SageSTEP Outreach Coordinator:Lael Gilbert, Utah State University

sagestep.org