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    • Reduce the amount of excessive fuel build-up

      • The primary objective of this prescribed burn is to reduce the amount of excessive fuel build-up. A combination of fuel reduction techniques, such as mechanical thinning, will occur prior to the scheduled prescribed burn.
  1. Prescribed Fire in Yosemite In 1970, the NPS began to intentionally return fires to Yosemite, recognizing the traditional use of fire on the landscape and its important ecological role. Since 1970, fire managers have used fire to restore thousands of acres of forest, and continue to plan for future prescribed fires throughout large portions of ...

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  3. May 21, 2024 · Prescribed fires are ignited by qualified park fire staff under certain pre-determined conditions. These fires are carefully managed to achieve goals such as public safety (by protecting developed areas) and ecosystem restoration (by clearing unsafe accumulation of dead and down wood).

  4. A prescribed fire at Yosemite National Park showing low-intensity burning in an area that receives frequent prescribed burns. Yosemite’s fire management program balances the protection of life, property, and natural and cultural resources with the restoration of fire as a natural process.

  5. Aug 4, 2024 · Yosemite National Park is a fire-adapted ecosystem. The overall strategy for all wildland fires is to provide for the safety of employees, the public, and to protect and enhance natural and cultural resources. Middle. Location: Near the Middle Fork of the Tuolumne River, west of White Wolf Lodge. Elevation: 7,000 feet; Discover date: August 4, 2024

    • Fire Can Be Devastating…
    • …And Yet, It Is Critically important.
    • Cultural Burning, The Precursor to Prescribed Fire
    • Fire Buzzwords, Defined

    Like many Western states, California is facing massive, historic, terrifying wildfires. Records have been shattered again and again in recent years. Entire towns have been consumed by fire, thousands of families have lost their homes, vital wildlife habitat has been destroyed, and air quality has been trending downward throughout the state. Yosemit...

    Fire is a critical and quintessential part of Yosemite’s ecosystems, as is true throughout most of California. This landscape adapted with wildfire, becoming both resistant to it and dependent on it. For example: 1. Mature giant sequoia trees are extremely resistant to low-intensity fire. Their thick trunks are devoid of vulnerable branches at the ...

    For many millennia, fire has been integral to many Indigenous peoples’ ways of life. Native Americans, Alaska Natives, and Native Hawaiians used fire to clear areas for crops and travel, to manage the land for specific species of both plants and animals, to hunt game, and for many other important uses. Fire was a tool that promoted ecological diver...

    SEVERITYis used to describe a wildfire’s impact to vegetation. A fire is considered high severity if it destroys a lot of trees and other flora, while a low severity fire has a minimal impact on th...
    INTENSITYrefers to the physical temperature of a wildfire. A fire that burns very hot is considered high intensity. Low intensity fires are the inverse.
    CATASTROPHICis a value-based term, and it is often misused. A catastrophic wildfire burns a giant sequoia grove, or the homes in a community. If something that we as humans value is lost in a fire,...
    CONTAINMENT is defined by the National Wildfire Coordinating Groupas “the status of a wildfire suppression action signifying that a control line has been completed around the fire, and any associat...
  6. Dec 10, 2021 · It was only in the 1970s, when the National Park Service noticed a decline in sequoias, that prescribed burns were reintroduced in Yosemite. This decision was informed, in part, by research following the 1955 McGee Fire, which tore through 13,000 acres and threatened Sequoia National Park.

  7. Aug 8, 2024 · In the 1970s, Yosemite National Park returned to prescribed fires controlled by experienced firefighting teams to mimic the natural and cultural presence of fire in the Park. Most U.S. national parks have now moved from full fire suppression to practicing some level of fire management including standing by when fire is naturally caused.

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