Tag Archives: forest

Stay alert! Wildfires can happen at anytime

 

🔥 Stay alert! Wildfires can happen at anytime. Remember, wildfires can happen at any moment. Be proactive and stay prepared with a 5-minute escape plan for your safety.

 

Visit firefightersonyourside.org for more safety tips.

 

#WildfireSafety #CBODirect

 

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California Launches Online Tool to Track Wildfire Resilience Projects

rcrc93September 3, 2023 – The Rural County Representatives of California (RCRC) reports the Governor’s Wildfire and Forest Resilience Task Force (Task Force) has launched the beta version of a first-of-its-kind Interagency Treatment Dashboard that displays the size and location of state and federal forest and landscape resilience projects in California.

The dashboard offers a one-stop-shop to access data, provide transparency, and align the efforts of more than a dozen agencies to build resilient landscapes and communities in California. It reports treatment activities such as prescribed fire, targeted grazing, uneven-aged timber harvest, mechanical and hand fuels reduction, and tree planting. Users can sort treatments by region, county, land ownership and more.

The dashboard is an important step to increase the pace and scale of statewide actions addressing California’s wildfire crisis and is a key deliverable of the Governor’s Wildfire and Forest Resilience Action Plan, issued by the Task Force in January 2021.

The beta version of the dashboard will continue to be refined to include additional data, including projects by local and tribal entities, along with revisions based on public feedback. An official launch is expected in spring 2024 with more complete data on projects implemented in 2022.


ABOUT RURAL COUNTY REPRESENTATIVES OF CALIFORNIA (RCRC)
The Rural County Representatives of California (RCRC) is a thirty-seven member county strong service organization that champions policies on behalf of California’s rural counties. RCRC is dedicated to representing the collective unique interests of its membership, providing legislative and regulatory representation at the State and Federal levels, and providing responsible services for its members to enhance and protect the quality of life in rural California counties. To learn more about RCRC, visit rcrcnet.org and follow @RuralCounties on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram.

Source: RCRC

 

 

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Webinar – Using landscape-scale passive acoustic monitoring to inform forest management across California’s Sierra Nevada

Join us and CalFire on July 26 at 3:00pm for a webinar from CALFIRE’s Forest Health Research Grant Program.

Kristin Brunk from the Cornell Lab of Ornithology will present on using bioacoustics to monitor bird habitat in Sierra Nevada forest treatments.

Details

Wildfire is expected to become more frequent, bigger, and hotter in the future, and managers in the western dry forests of North America face increasingly critical and time-sensitive tradeoffs when planning forest restoration activities. In this webinar, I will share some of our ongoing FHRP-funded work using passive acoustic monitoring across ~ 22,000 km2 of California’s Sierra Nevada to map avian distributions, understand habitat associations at broad spatial scales, and ultimately provide managers with the information they need to balance the short-term and long-term tradeoffs of forest restoration in the context of changing climate and disturbance regimes. This is a public webinar.

Register by CLICKING HERE

 

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Woodpecker Guides Post-Fire Forest Management

The Sierra Nevada in Northern California comes back to life after a wildfire. Photo by Jean Hall.

Woodpecker Guides Post-Fire Forest Management

New tool turns science into action

For release: April 25, 2023

Ithaca, NY—What’s good for the Black-backed Woodpecker is good for restoration of burned California forests. The birds’ unique relationship with fire underpins the latest research into improved post-fire management. A study published in Ecological Applications describes a new tool that factors how fires burn into forest management decisions and turns science into action for wildlife conservation.

“Wildfire is like a 10,000-piece puzzle, and climate change is rearranging the pieces,” said lead author Andrew Stillman with the Cornell Atkinson Center for Sustainability and the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. “Gigantic, severe fires are becoming the new norm in California due to drought, longer burn seasons, and dense forests. But birds do really well in landscapes that are ‘pyrodiverse’– areas where fire results in uneven patches burned at high, medium, and low severity.”

What pyrodiversity looks like: a mosaic of burned, partially burned, and living trees after a wildfire in Montana.
Photo by Jeremy Roberts, www.ConservationMedia.com

Black-backed Woodpeckers love pyrodiversity. They prefer to build their nest cavities in newly burned areas after high severity fire. But they also like to be adjacent to an area that burned at low intensity where their young can hide from predators among living trees that still provide cover. The species’ unique habitat associations means that they are sensitive to the removal of trees after fire, and forest managers use information on the woodpecker to guide their post-fire planning.

After a wildfire, forest managers face difficult decisions about how to best protect and restore the burned areas while balancing the needs of people and wildlife. Sometimes there isn’t time to survey wildlife in burned areas, making it hard to choose where to invest in wildlife conservation. To address this need, the researchers developed an online tool to predict the potential abundance of Black-backed Woodpeckers after fire. Incorporating new information on the value of pyrodiversity made the underlying models more accurate.


Black-backed Woodpecker at its nest in a burned tree. Photo by Jeremy Roberts, www.ConservationMedia.com

“The tool we’ve created uses data from 11 years of surveys to predict where woodpeckers could be found in the greatest numbers using data available within months after a fire burns,” said Stillman. “The birds move in to take advantage of a boom in juicy beetle larvae in the burned trees.”

The online tool uses many layers of information, starting with a satellite-derived layer of burn severity that forest managers can upload. That layer is then used to assess pyrodiversity based on how much forest canopy has been lost. Other datasets on woodpecker home ranges, vegetation type, latitude, longitude, elevation, years since a fire burned, and more, are also integrated.

The new tool will save time and effort after a wildfire and is meant for forest managers, conservationists, and private landowners. It is hosted by The Institute for Bird Populations in partnership with the USDA Forest Service. Though currently set up for California, the methods hold promise for other regions and species.

“A burned forest is a unique, incredible, and complicated ecosystem that bursts with new life,” Stillman said. “At first you think everything is dead. The ground is ash. The trees are black. But as you start walking around, you find that the place is alive. It’s not dead, just changed.”

Reference:
Andrew N. Stillman, Robert L. Wilkerson, Danielle R. Kaschube, Rodney B. Siegel, Sarah C. Sawyer, and Morgan W. Tingley. Incorporating pyrodiversity into wildlife habitat assessments for rapid post-fire management: a woodpecker case study. Ecological Applications. April 2023. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/eap.2853

This research was funded by the Joint Fire Science Program of the Department of the Interior and the U.S. Forest Service, the Cornell Atkinson Center for Sustainability, and The Institute for Bird Populations.

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EditorsDownload images. The use of this material is protected by copyright. Use is permitted only within stories about the content of this release. Redistribution or any other use is prohibited without express written permission of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology or the copyright owner.

Media Contact:
Pat Leonard, Cornell Lab of Ornithology, (607) 254-2137, pel27@cornell.edu

 

 

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