May 30, 2019

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Prescribed burning to combat wildfires has not increased in the U.S. West

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Credit: CC0 Public Domain

Fire management agencies are not increasing the use of prescribed fire—a key tool for preventing wildfires—anywhere outside of the Southeastern United States, according to a new University of Idaho study.

The study, published today, May 29, in the journal Fire, evaluated data trends from 1998 to the present in the National Interagency Fire Center Situation Report Archives as well as historical wildland fire summaries, which began in 2002.

"Prescribed fire has actually decreased over the last 21 years in the Western United States," said Crystal Kolden, the study's author and an associate professor in U of I's College of Natural Resources. "This means that one of our best tools to reduce disasters is not being used."

Prescribed fire, sometimes called controlled burning, is set intentionally usually during cooler weather for purposes. The federal government's National Cohesive Management Strategy, published in 2014, which was meant to guide the country's wildfire management, pointed to prescribed fire as one of the most effective means to reduce fuel and mitigate the hazard of wildfire.

From 1998 to 2018, the use of prescribed fire increased about 5 percent each year. Nearly all of that increase, 98 percent, was in the Southeast U.S.—and most was not completed by the . Of the major federal agencies, only the Bureau of Indian Affairs has increased prescribed fire use.

There's a more widespread acceptance that prescribed fire and smoke is necessary to reducing wildfires in Southeastern states, Kolden said. The study indicates that the rest of the country has lagged in adopting prescribed fire.

"If we can't figure out how to do more prescribed , we're going to continue to see 'megafires' and wildfire disasters due to climate change," Kolden said.

Wildfires, particularly in the West, have taken a greater toll in recent years, both in terms of dollars and human life. According to data from insurer Munich RE, wildfires caused more than $40 billion in damage in 2017 and 2018. Fatalities among civilians are also increasing. Over the past four years, more than 200 civilians died from California wildfires.

"Civilians never used to die in ," Kolden said. "These are the sort of tragedies that prescribed burning can help prevent."

Kolden's research focuses on analyzing how wildfire works across large landscapes, and she is leading a multidisciplinary project to help Northwest states better predict and recover from wildfire. She is part of a team of researchers at U of I who are studying wildfire and its impacts .

More information: Crystal A. Kolden. We're Not Doing Enough Prescribed Fire in the Western United States to Mitigate Wildfire Risk, Fire (2019). DOI: 10.3390/fire2020030

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