Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Here’s how you know

Dot gov

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

HTTPS

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( Lock A locked padlock ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

  • Environmental Topics
  • Laws & Regulations
  • Report a Violation
  • About EPA
Risk Assessment
Contact Us

Long-Term Patterns of Post-Fire Harvest Diverge Among Ownerships in the Pacific West, U.S.A.

On this page:

  • Overview
  • Downloads
Post-fire harvest (PFH) is a forest management practice designed to salvage value from burned timber, mitigate safety hazards from dead trees, reduce long-term fuels, and prepare sites for replanting. Despite public controversy and extensive ecological research, little is known about how much PFH occurs on private and public lands in the U.S. Pacific West, or how practices changed with shifting forest policy and increasing area burned over the last three decades. We mapped PFH across 2.5M burned hectares in California, Oregon, and Washington between 1986-2017 and used time series intervention analysis to compare trends in area, rate (% of burned area harvested), and mean patch size between private and federal forest land and across a gradient of burn severity. PFH area and rate declined across all ownerships in the mid-1990s during a period of reduced fire activity. As area burned increased between the early 2000s and late 2010s, PFH area rebounded and surpassed levels in the late-1980s, while rates remained low. On federal lands, PFH practices shifted in the early-to-mid 1990s towards lower rates (10.3% to 3.8%) and smaller patches (6.0 to 3.3 ha), following policy changes and increased litigation. PFH rates on federal lands decreased at all levels of burn severity, with the largest decreases (6.2% to 1.2%) in forests with low tree mortality (i.e. fire refugia). Conversely, private PFH rates and mean patch sizes more than doubled in forests burned at very low-to-moderate severity. Our results highlight how PFH practices have shifted with policy, socio-economic pressure, and increasing area burned over 31 years in the Pacific West. A similar area of post-fire harvest is now dispersed over larger fires, with practices diverging substantially between ownerships.

Impact/Purpose

Post-fire harvest (PFH) is a forest management practice designed to salvage value from burned timber, mitigate wildfire and safety risks from standing dead trees, and prepare sites for replanting, but little is known about how PFH practices in the U.S. Pacific West have changed with shifting forest policy and increasing wildfire activity in recent decades.  Despite public interest and extensive ecological research, the amount of annual area salvaged on public and private lands has not been tracked in the Pacific West prior to and after implementation of the Northwest Forest Plan of 1994.  PESD scientists in collaboration with USDA Forest Service scientists examined trends in annual salvage area and rate (% of burned area harvested) and patch size on private and federal forest land based on the multi-agency Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity (MTBS) database of individual fires and Landsat remote sensing data of land cover for the period 1986-2017.  PESD and USFS scientists used Google Earth Engine, a cloud-computing platform, to identify harvests of 1,007 individual fires based on imagery analysis to detect changes in the red and short-wave infrared wavelengths of Landsat data over a five year period post-fire.  PESD and USFS scientists are first to show that temporal variations in annual PFH area and rate 1986-2017 were affected differently by policy, socio-economic pressure, and increasing area burned in the Pacific West depending on ownership.  PFH area and rate declined across all ownerships in the mid-1990s during a period of reduced fire activity.  As area burned increased starting around 2000, PFH area increased and surpassed levels in the late-1980s, while rates remained low.  On federal lands, PFH practices shifted in the early-to-mid-1990s towards lower rates and smaller patch sizes following policy changes and increased litigation. Conversely, private PFH rates and mean patch sizes more than doubled in forests burned at low-to-moderate severity.  Understanding the interactions of policy, wildfire activity, and ownership on PFH practices is critical for managing our limited resources to mitigate the socioeconomic and ecological impacts of climate change to the environment and public health.

Citation

Zuspan, E., M. Reilly, AND E. Lee. Long-Term Patterns of Post-Fire Harvest Diverge Among Ownerships in the Pacific West, U.S.A. IOP Publishing LIMITED, Bristol, UK, 19(12):124075, (2024). [DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/ad8e75]

Download(s)

DOI: Long-Term Patterns of Post-Fire Harvest Diverge Among Ownerships in the Pacific West, U.S.A.
  • Risk Assessment Home
  • About Risk Assessment
  • Risk Recent Additions
  • Human Health Risk Assessment
  • Ecological Risk Assessment
  • Risk Advanced Search
    • Risk Publications
  • Risk Assessment Guidance
  • Risk Tools and Databases
  • Superfund Risk Assessment
  • Where you live
Contact Us to ask a question, provide feedback, or report a problem.
Last updated on December 03, 2024
United States Environmental Protection Agency

Discover.

  • Accessibility Statement
  • Budget & Performance
  • Contracting
  • EPA www Web Snapshots
  • Grants
  • No FEAR Act Data
  • Privacy
  • Privacy and Security Notice

Connect.

  • Data
  • Inspector General
  • Jobs
  • Newsroom
  • Open Government
  • Regulations.gov
  • Subscribe
  • USA.gov
  • White House

Ask.

  • Contact EPA
  • EPA Disclaimers
  • Hotlines
  • FOIA Requests
  • Frequent Questions

Follow.