TNC Misinformation On Wildfire

The Dixie Fire, the largest in California in 2021, burned through tens of thousands of acres under “active forest management”, which did nothing to slow the fire’s spread. Photo by George Wuerthner

The recent June 18th editorial in the Oregon Capital Chronicle by the Nature Conservancy representatives, “Oregonians deserve a smarter approach to wildfires: Both suppression and risk reduction are necessary,” was based upon flawed assumptions about wildfire.

Funded by federal dollars, TNC leads the Deschutes Collaborative, which promotes forest degradation, such as that is seen here, where there is little ground cover, even aged trees, and no snags. Photo by George Wuerthner

It is worth noting that TNC has a conflict of interest since it receives significant funding from the federal government to promote logging and prescribe burns.

TNC promotes the idea that chainsaw medicine will reduce wildfires as it reduces forest ecosystems. Photo by George Wuerthner

The commentary advocates more active forest management, such as logging and prescribed burning, to reduce large wildfires. Yet a growing body of evidence suggests that logging and prescribed burning increase fire hazard.

There are three significant problems with their perspective. The first is the idea that frequent low-severity wildfires historically reduced large blazes.

The vast majority of all plant communities in the West were characterized by long fire rotations, often decades to hundreds of years in length. This includes sagebrush, chaparral, lodgepole pine, white pine, larch, fir, cedar, aspen, and nearly all the major plant communities in the West. There is no abnormal “fuel buildup” in these ecosystems.

A historical photo of Oregon loggers cutting an old-growth ponderosa pine with dense pine surrounding it. Historically, many dry forest ecosystems were characterized by variable density of trees, and open park-like conditions in many locations were the exception, not the rule.

A second flawed premise is that dry forests were open and park-like before modern fire suppression due to tribal burning. Numerous studies show that such burning was localized and had little landscape influence.

However, climate/weather, not fuels, controls all large wildfires. And our climate is warming due to human carbon emissions. Wildfires are increasing, but not as a consequence of abnormal fuels.

The Jocko Lake Fire on the Lolo NF near Seeley Lake, Montana burned through many acres of thinned and logged forests. Photo by George Wuerthner

A further misnomer is that chainsaws and other management practices promote a healthy forest ecosystem.

The snag forest that results from high-severity blazes is critical habitat for numerous plants and animals. Photo by George Wuerthner

The idea that our forests are unhealthy is a myth promoted by the timber industry and forestry schools, which see any natural mortality from wildfire, insects, drought, or other factors as a sign of forests in distress. This perspective is analogous to seeing wolves or mountain lion predation as an indication of “unhealthy” deer herds.

Indeed, for TNC, chainsaw medicine is the way to sustain a healthy forest. It’s a failure to see the forest through the trees.

Snag forest along Hermosa Creek, San Juan NF, Colorado. Snag forests are a short-lived ecological habitat that is used by many species. Photo by George Wuerthner

Ecologically speaking, more species depend on dead trees than live trees. More mushrooms, lichens, wildflowers, bees, birds, fish, and large mammals are found in the snag forests, resulting from natural processes like wildfire. Many wildlife and plants live in a “mortal” fear of green trees. Snags are gifts to the forest ecosystem.

Instead, TNC and most agencies advocate logging the forest to “restore” health. The problem with chainsaw medicine is that it is contrary to evolution. The selective influence of wildfire, drought, insects, and disease increases the health and resistance of forest ecosystems. Chainsaws degrade our forest.

Prior to WW11, the majority of firefighters used hand tools and traveled by mules and horses to suppress wildfires. Their influence on fires was minimal, which is why millions of acres burned during the early decades of the 20th Century.

TNC suggests “a hundred years” of fire suppression has led to “unhealthy” forests with dense tree stands. Again, this ignores the reality. Climate/weather is the overwhelming influence on fire activity.

This chart shows the influence of the climate on wildfire acres burned. Warm, dry periods led to more ignitions and larger fires, while cool, moist periods burned fewer acres.

Massive wildfires around the West occurred in the early 1900s under dry, warm conditions. The 1910 Big Burn in Idaho and Montana charred 3.5 million acres. In the 1920s, as the Dust Bowl drought was having its influence, as much as 50 million acres burned annually across the West.

Due to cool, moist conditions between 1940 and 1980, glaciers grew on many western peaks, including Mount Hood. Photo by George Wuerthner

Then, in the 1940s-1980s, the climate became wet and cold. Glaciers began to expand on the mountain peaks of the West. What happens to fires when it’s cool and damp? You get fewer ignitions. And no fires don’t spread well and stay small. But in typical human arrogance, we take credit for “suppressing” fires. In truth, nature was good at suppressing fires under those climate conditions.

Then, in the late 1980s, the influence of human carbon emissions started to change the fire regime. Human carbon emissions are the primary factor in large wildfires, not fire suppression.

Even today, when TNC and others suggest there is too much “fuel,” most fires burn a few acres at most. Depending on the specific study, 97-99% of all fires burn less than a hundred acres, and most self-extinguish. Only a very few burns, usually less than 0.1% of all wildfires, grow into large blazes.

All large blazes are wind-blown affairs. Wind drove this blaze near Yellowstone Lake in Yellowstone NP.

Why? To create a large fire, you need specific climate/weather conditions of extensive drought, high temperatures, low humidity, and, most critically, high winds. Under such extreme fire weather conditions, no forest treatments work to preclude blazes.

Under such conditions, embers are blown over, through, and around logging and prescribed burn projects.

Clear-cuts along the McKenzie River in western Oregon did little to slow the Holiday Farm Fire which charred nearly all the areas seen in this Google image.

And unless we do something about carbon emissions, all the chainsaw medicine in the world will not preclude large blazes. In Oregon, logging contributes more carbon emissions by far than wildfire, and even transportation.

Wind-tossed embers led to the loss of this home in Altadena, California. Photo by George Wuerthner

These “active management” proposals cost us billions of dollars and are ineffective. Beyond reducing carbon emissions, hardening homes is the only solution proven to reduce home losses from wildfires burning under extreme fire weather conditions. We should invest in community hardening efforts rather than degrading the forest ecosystem with chainsaw medicine.

Author

George Wuerthner is an ecologist and writer who has published 38 books on various topics related to environmental and natural history.

Among his titles are:

Welfare Ranching-The Subsidized Destruction of the American West

Wildfire-A Century of Failed Forest Policy

Energy—Overdevelopment and the Delusion of Endless Growth

Keeping the Wild-Against the Domestication of the Earth

Protecting the Wild—Parks, and Wilderness as the Foundation for Conservation

Nevada Mountain Ranges

Alaska Mountain Ranges

California’s Wilderness Areas—Deserts

California Wilderness Areas—Coast and Mountains,

Montana’s Magnificent Wilderness, Yellowstone—A Visitor’s Companion

Yellowstone and the Fires of Change,

Yosemite—The Grace and the Grandeur,

Mount Rainier—A Visitor’s Companion,

Texas’s Big Bend Country,

The Adirondacks-Forever Wild

Southern Appalachia Country, among others.

He has visited over 400 designated wilderness areas and over 200 national park units.

In the past, he has worked as a cadastral surveyor in Alaska, a river ranger on several wild and scenic rivers in Alaska, a backcountry ranger in the Gates of the Arctic National Park in Alaska, a wilderness guide in Alaska, a natural history guide in Yellowstone National Park, a freelance writer and photographer, a high school science teacher, and more recently ecological projects director for the Foundation for Deep Ecology. He currently is the ED of Public Lands Media

He has been on the board or science advisor of numerous environmental organizations, including RESTORE the North Woods, Gallatin Yellowstone Wilderness Association, Park Country Environmental Coalition, Wildlife Conservation Predator Defense, Gallatin Wildlife Association, Western Watersheds Project, Project Coyote, Rewilding Institute, The Wildlands Project, Patagonia Land Trust, The Ecological Citizen, Montana Wilderness Association, New National Parks Campaign, Montana Wild Bison Restoration Council, Friends of Douglas Fir National Monument, Sage Steppe Wild, and others.

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