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Project ID: 04-2-1-06
Year: 2004
Date Started: 08/06/2004
Date Completed: 11/09/2009
Title: Fire in Southern Appalachians: Fuels, Stand Structure and Oaks
Project Proposal Abstract: Managers responsible for maintaining the diversity and productivity of southern Appalachian forests are increasingly turning to prescribed fire as a management tool in oak dominated forests. The decision to use fire with increasing frequency and spatial extent is based, in part, on an emerging sense of the prehistoric significance of fire in this landscape and its potential to control the proliferation of fire-sensitive competitors in contemporary forests. While it is well documented that fire has been an important ecological force in southern Appalachian forests for a very long time, there has been little research to demonstrate that prescribed fire effectively controls fire-sensitive competitors, promotes regeneration of desirable species, or maintains and promotes healthy forest stands. In the face of increased management burning there is a need to address these questions, and to quantify the role of existing and residual fuels in fire management following repeated fire of differing intervals. This proposal addresses these knowledge gaps through studies that examine the effects of frequent and infrequent prescribed fire on stand structure, response of seedlings, recruitment, and residual trees, and fuels. We initiated a small study with limited university and Forest Service funding starting in 1995, and more recently initiated a more comprehensive study with JFSP funding. As part of the technology transfer component of our JFSP-funded project we held meetings with managers and researchers in which managers articulated the need for quantification of fuels and bole damage. As a result we incorporated measurements of fuels, bole damage, and health class of crowns into our study design prior to implementation of burning in 2003. By the time our JSFP funding cycle is over (in September 2004) we will have burned the `frequent' fire sites two times (2003 and 2004) and the `infrequent' fire sites once (in 2003). Funds for the proposed work would permit us to extend this locally and regionally important research to an increasingly meaningful duration that incorporates input from managers obtained from technology transfer activities in our current project. We propose to characterize stand structural changes and the resulting spatial variability in light regime created by frequent and infrequent prescribed fire, quantify the response of individual seedlings using large seedling population studies, and quantify seedling recruitment. We will also quantify fuel consumption and subsequent re-accumulation following fire, and examine the effects of fire on residual stems. This project builds on ongoing research and capitalizes on strong interactions between researchers and managers for the development of science delivery and application activities.
Principal Investigator: David Loftis
Agency/Organization: Forest Service
Branch or Dept: SRS-Bent Creek Experimental Forest
Other Project Collaborators
Type |
Name |
Agency/Organization |
Branch or Dept |
Co-Principal Investigator |
Mary A. Arthur |
University of Kentucky |
Department of Forestry |
Federal Cooperator |
David Loftis |
Forest Service |
SRS-Bent Creek Experimental Forest |
Project Locations
Consortium |
Appalachian |
Oak Woodlands |
South |
There are no project locations identified for this project.
Project Deliverables
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Final Report ("Results presented in JFSP Final Reports may not have been peer-reviewed and should be interpreted as tentative until published in a peer-reviewed source.") |
There are no deliverables available for this project.
Supporting Documents
The following supporting documents are available for this project.
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