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wildfires


Multiagency Effort Goes Deep Inside a Fire

July 29, 2019 Gail Keirn, Rocky Mountain Research Station-Fort Collins, CO; Matt Burks, Pacific Northwest Research Station-Corvallis, OR and John Zapell, Fishlake National Forest-Richfield, UT

Forest fires often reach or exceed temperatures of 2,000° Fahrenheit—that’s equivalent to one-fifth the temperature of the surface of the sun. What is the impact of such high temperatures on the soil and plants of our forests? And how do the intensity and heat of a wildfire impact its behavior...

Forestry

Wildfires in All Seasons?

June 27, 2019 Deb Schweizer, USDA Forest Service, Fire Aviation and Management

In recent decades the number, severity and overall size of wildfires has increased across much of the U.S. In fact, the 2018 wildfire season in California recorded the largest fire in acres burned, most destructive fire in property loss and deadliest fires in the state’s history.

Forestry

New Research Confirms that Today’s Wildfires Moderate Future Fires

June 13, 2019 Diane Banegas, Research and Development, USDA Forest Service

The Forest Service manages landscapes, so they are resilient and resistant to threats of all kinds—from fires, to drought, to pest infestations. Forest Service researchers recently confirmed that naturally occurring wildland fire helps create fire-resilient landscapes that limit the start and spread...

Forestry

Pardon our Smoke

May 01, 2019 Pete Lahm, Fire and Aviation Management, USDA Forest Service

Where there’s fire, there’s smoke. Air quality impacts from wildfires have become significant health events and are now, in fact, the greatest source of air pollution exposure faced by the American public. In addition, as wildfires increase in duration, communities often face multiple weeks of...

Forestry

Making Forests Stronger through Active Management

March 01, 2019 Beth Rands, U.S. Forest Service

For years, catastrophic wildfires have threatened forests throughout the country. Wildfires have increased in both size and severity, and with them the risks to communities, natural resources, and firefighter safety.

Forestry

Smokey Bear’s 75th Birthday to be Celebrated in Parades and Parties all over the U.S.

February 01, 2019 Robert Hudson Westover, Office of Communication, USDA Forest Service

There are icons and then there is Smokey Bear. Iconic mascots and images come and go but Smokey and his one clear message “Only you can prevent wildfires” has stood the test of time—75 years to be exact.

Forestry

Fighting Fire with Fuel Treatments: A Shared Stewardship Approach

December 14, 2018 Jennifer Croft, Applied Fire Ecologist, USDA Forest Service

Fire season now spans the entire year. Before summer even begins, forests are primed in large parts of the country for large fires that spread rapidly in trees that are dehydrated from drought, compromised from fighting off bugs, and often competing for space in overly dense forests.

Forestry

Can You Claim Timber Damages from Hurricane or Fires on Your Taxes?

November 02, 2018 Linda Wang, Cooperative Forestry, Forest Service

2018 was another record year of hurricanes and fires, which have inflicted huge economic losses to timber landowners as well as homeowners with landscape trees.

Forestry

Devastating Fire Season Inspires Restoration Collaboration in the Spirit of Shared Stewardship

October 31, 2018 Margee Haines and Josh McDaniel, USDA Forest Service

The summer of 2015 was exceptionally hot and dry in northern Idaho. Fuel moistures had dropped to alarming levels, and when a series of lightning storms moved across the region in early August, hundreds of fires flared up. A group of fast-moving and intense fires, which eventually became known as...

Forestry

Where There’s Fire, There’s Smoke and it’s Bad for your Health

August 23, 2018 Robert Westover, Office of Communication, USDA Forest Service

Deadly and destructive wildland fires consuming so much of the West, from California all the way to British Columbia, are not only affecting those who have had to flee but those who are downwind of these massive infernos. At one point, in early July, before the prevailing winds helped de-choke...

Forestry
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