Patrick Bourgeron
/asmagazine/
enHumans, wildfires forge a 鈥榮ocioeconomic pathology鈥�
/asmagazine/2016/09/11/humans-wildfires-forge-socioeconomic-pathology
<span>Humans, wildfires forge a 鈥榮ocioeconomic pathology鈥�</span>
<span><span>Anonymous (not verified)</span></span>
<span><time datetime="2016-09-11T13:57:19-06:00" title="Sunday, September 11, 2016 - 13:57">Sun, 09/11/2016 - 13:57</time>
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<a href="/asmagazine/taxonomy/term/406" hreflang="en">Patrick Bourgeron</a>
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<a href="/asmagazine/jeff-thomas">Jeff Thomas</a>
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<div><p class="lead"><em><strong>The interaction of human development and forest management makes understanding fire risk a more complicated affair, researchers find</strong></em></p><hr><p>More than 20 years ago, Patrick Bourgeron, then working for the Nature Conservancy, realized that big was never big enough when it came to ecosystem management and wildfire mitigation, a shift in thinking that led to landscape- and regional-scale analysis.</p><p>鈥淲e were thinking largely in terms of watershed planning, but the best thinking was encouraging forest analysis and planning on larger spatial scales, from landscape to regional, with a longer time horizon,鈥� said Bourgeron, now a researcher with the 麻豆原创鈥檚 Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research (INSTAAR).</p><p>鈥淲e simply were not getting the results we needed. Why weren鈥檛 we able to predict the next insect outbreak? Why weren鈥檛 we able to pinpoint the next forest fire?鈥�</p><div class="image-caption image-caption-left"><p><a href="/asmagazine/sites/default/files/styles/large/public/article-image/psb_landscape.jpeg?itok=gHKh6iEy" rel="nofollow">
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<img loading="lazy" src="/asmagazine/sites/default/files/styles/medium_750px_50_display_size_/public/article-image/psb_landscape.jpeg?itok=reSlWUMO" width="750" height="750" alt="Patrick Bourgeron is working to factor in the human element in wildfire projections, an effort that treats wildfire risk as a kind of sickness. ">
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<p>Patrick Bourgeron is working to factor in the human element in wildfire projections, an effort that treats wildfire risk as a kind of sickness. </p></div><p>Today Bourgeron finds himself asking those same questions on the cutting edge of attempts to successfully model an increasingly complex system for mitigating wildfire danger 鈥� one that factors in the human element and treats wildfire risk as a kind of sickness. </p><p>鈥淲ildfire risk as a socioecological pathology鈥� was published in a recent edition of <em>Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment</em>, and included some 19 authors 鈥� all of them part of this cutting-edge movement, including Bourgeron, according to Paige Fischer, the lead author and an assistant professor in the University of Michigan鈥檚 School of Natural Resources & Environment.</p><p>鈥淭hese were some of the top researchers in the field鈥� who were brought together by the National Science Foundation (NSF) to collaborate on efforts to study these relationships, Fischer said. The paper essentially lays the groundwork for further studying and modeling of 鈥渃oupled natural and human systems鈥� in temperate forests across the United States, Australia and Greece.</p><div class="feature-layout-callout feature-layout-callout-large">
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<p><em><strong>What does forest management do to the frequency, size and intensity of wildfires? What happens when people think about the impact of their houses on forests and forest fires? Does it change the rate they build housing (and the type of materials they use) in the wildland urban interface?"</strong></em></p><p>
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</div><p>鈥淲e needed to put down what we have learned from the past six or seven years studying these coupled systems 鈥� you have natural systems responding to management and climate, and you have social systems responding to what people want to see,鈥� Fischer said.</p><p>So how tricky can that be? Apparently, adding in sociological information vastly complicates the fire models most ecologists use.</p><p>鈥淚t is obvious, but the idea is deceiving because it鈥檚 so simple,鈥� Bourgeron said.</p><p>鈥淏ut then it becomes more interesting. What does forest management do to the frequency, size and intensity of wildfires? What happens when people think about the impact of their houses on forests and forest fires? Does it change the rate they build housing (and the type of materials they use) in the wildland urban interface? How does that change the propagation of fir (trees)? Then suddenly it becomes much more complex.鈥�</p><div class="image-caption image-caption-left"><p><a href="/asmagazine/sites/default/files/styles/large/public/article-image/colospringsfire.jpg?itok=6oa_R21L" rel="nofollow">
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<img loading="lazy" src="/asmagazine/sites/default/files/styles/medium_750px_50_display_size_/public/article-image/colospringsfire.jpg?itok=6uvhoLTH" width="750" height="485" alt="With smoke and heat waves rising, a huge C-130 fire fighting aircraft drops red fire retardant near homes on the southern part of the 2013 Black Forest fire in Colorado Springs, Colorado's most destructive fire ever. ">
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<p>With smoke and heat waves rising, a huge C-130 fire fighting aircraft drops red fire retardant near homes on the southern part of the 2013 Black Forest fire in Colorado Springs, Colorado's most destructive fire ever. </p></div><p>In a totally natural system, rating fire danger can be fairly straightforward. As a forest ages, fuel loading increases and the overall danger is then amplified or diminished by recent climatic conditions, such as drought, Bourgeron said.</p><p>Human contributions to this equation tend not to be so linear. For instance, if fire suppression adds to the danger of a large fire, it becomes a positive feedback loop, because more human settlement requires more vigorous suppression. Adding more homes also increases the complexity in the natural system model, because treatment becomes less homogeneous across the landscape and the homes themselves add to the fuel loading.</p><p>Bourgeron, who is finishing a NSF-funded study on wildfire danger in the Colorado Front Range, said that it is only the beginning of the model complexity presented by introducing the human element. Different people look for different outcomes from their forest, which are sometimes based on what economists label 鈥渆cosystem services.鈥�</p><p>Ecosystem services range from aesthetic dimensions, such as viewsheds, recreation, products, and, very importantly, often contribute to income and taxes. These affect the long-term goals of forest management, as well as greatly affect the chances of reaching consensus among stakeholders.</p><p>From a sociological perspective, there are also complexities involved in communications, and Bourgeron said Fischer鈥檚 network analysis added greatly to the NSF effort to update the state of coupled-systems efforts. While the authors noted that much of the progress in this area had come on the heels of the forest controversies in Washington and Oregon in the 1990s, some issues still have not been addressed.</p><p>In the article, Fischer noted that an analysis of communications among groups in Oregon that focus on forest restoration seem to be distinctly separated from those that focus on fire protection.</p><p>鈥淭his pattern suggests that interaction between actors from the two groups may be constrained,鈥� she said. 鈥淧olicy interventions could create new institutions to bring forest-restoration and fire-protection actors into more frequent and sustained interactions.鈥�</p><p>Substantial programs forged by the U.S. Forest Service and the Natural Resources Conservation Service address these situations, including practices widely employed in Colorado, such as the Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration Program and stewardship programs. These programs, at the least, set up networks in which stakeholders and both public and private landowners can work cooperatively to enact landscape-scale programs.</p><p>鈥淲e wouldn鈥檛 think about doing landscape-scale analysis without that networking in place,鈥� Bourgeron said. However, he said the complexity inherent in these studies is only increasing, with climate change brought to the forefront.</p><p>鈥淭hat was really the impetus for this meeting (of the coupled systems experts),鈥� he said. The Forest Service and NRCS are 鈥渢rying to drive climate change into these models.鈥�</p><p><em>Jeff Thomas is Lafayette-based freelance writer and a 1983 graduate of the 麻豆原创. </em> </p><p> </p></div>
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<div>"What does forest management do to the frequency, size and intensity of wildfires? What happens when people think about the impact of their houses on forests and forest fires? Does it change the rate they build housing (and the type of materials they use) in the wildland urban interface?" Researchers grapple with these questions.</div>
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Sun, 11 Sep 2016 19:57:19 +0000Anonymous1484 at /asmagazine