Texarkana Gazette

Priceless seeds, sprouts key to West’s post-fire future

- By Susan Montoya Bryan

A New Mexico facility where researcher­s work to restore forests devastated by fires faced an almost cruelly ironic threat: The largest wildfire burning in the U.S. was fast approachin­g.

Owen Burney and his team knew they had to save what they could. Atop their list was a priceless bank of millions of ponderosa pine, spruce and other conifer seeds meant to help restore fire-ravaged landscapes across the American West.

Next were tens of thousands of tree sprouts, many of which were sown to make them more drought tolerant, that were loaded onto trailers and trucked to a greenhouse about 100 miles away.

New Mexico State University’s Forestry Research Center in the mountain community of Mora is one of only a few such nurseries in the country and stands at the forefront of a major undertakin­g to rebuild more resilient forests as wildfires burn hotter, faster and more often.

Firefighte­rs have managed to keep the flames from reaching the center’s greenhouse­s and there’s a chance some of the seedlings left behind could be salvaged. But Burney, superinten­dent of the center, said the massive fire still churning through New Mexico highlights how far behind land managers are when it comes to preventing such fires through thinning and planned burns.

“The sad truth is we’re not going to be able to do that overnight, so we’re going to see these catastroph­ic fires for a decade, two decades, three decades — it depends on how quickly we make this turn,” he said, while stuck at home watching live updates of the fire’s progressio­n as road blocks remained in place.

This year is the worst start to the wildfire season in the past decade. More than 3,737 square miles have burned across the U.S., almost triple the 10-year average.

With no shortage of burn scars around the West, researcher­s and private groups such as The Nature Conservanc­y have been tapping New Mexico State University’s center for seedlings to learn how best to restore forests after the flames are extinguish­ed.

 ?? AP Photo/Susan Montoya Bryan ?? Nursery manager Tammy Parsons thins aspen seedlings Wednesday at a greenhouse in Santa Fe, N.M. Parsons and her colleagues evacuated an invaluable collection of seeds and tens of thousands of seedlings from the New Mexico State University’s Forestry Research Center in Mora, N.M., as the largest fire burning in the U.S. approached the facility.
AP Photo/Susan Montoya Bryan Nursery manager Tammy Parsons thins aspen seedlings Wednesday at a greenhouse in Santa Fe, N.M. Parsons and her colleagues evacuated an invaluable collection of seeds and tens of thousands of seedlings from the New Mexico State University’s Forestry Research Center in Mora, N.M., as the largest fire burning in the U.S. approached the facility.

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