Spatiotemporal dynamics of simulated wildfire, forest management, and forest succession in central Oregon, USA
Authored by John P Bolte, Emily Platt, Thomas A Spies, Robert J Pabst, John D Bailey, Ana M G Barros, Alan A Ager, Michelle A Day, Haiganoush K Preisler, Eric White, Keith A Olsen
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.5751/es-08917-220124
Sponsors:
United States Department of Agriculture (USDA)
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
Envision
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
We use the simulation model Envision to analyze long-term wildfire
dynamics and the effects of different fuel management scenarios in
central Oregon, USA. We simulated a 50-year future where fuel management
activities were increased by doubling and tripling the current area
treated while retaining existing treatment strategies in terms of
spatial distribution and treatment type. We modeled forest succession
using a state-and-transition approach and simulated wildfires based on
the contemporary fire regime of the region. We tested for the presence
of temporal trends and overall differences in burned area among four
fuel management scenarios. Results showed that when the forest was
managed to reduce fuels it burned less: over the course of 50 years
there was up to a 40\% reduction in area burned. However, simulation
outputs did not reveal the expected temporal trend, i.e., area burned
did not decrease progressively with time, nor did the absence of
management lead to its increase. These results can be explained as the
consequence of an existing wildfire deficit and vegetation succession
paths that led to closed canopy, and heavy fuels forest types that are
unlikely to burn under average fire weather. Fire (and management)
remained relatively rare disturbances and, given our assumptions, were
unable to alter long-term vegetation patterns and consequently unable to
alter long-term wildfire dynamics. Doubling and tripling current
management targets were effective in the near term but not sustainable
through time because of a scarcity of stands eligible to treat according
to the modeled management constraints. These results provide new
insights into the long-term dynamics between fuel management programs
and wildfire and demonstrate that treatment prioritization strategies
have limited effect on fire activity if they are too narrowly focused on
particular forest conditions.
Tags
Agent-based model
Landscape
Climate-change
Northern california
Pacific-northwest
Sierra-nevada
Deschutes national forest
Flammap
Minimum travel
time
State-and-transition model
Western united-states
Mixed-conifer forests
Fuel treatments
Wildland fire
Severity