Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Fires jeopardize California's prized forests

More than 1,760 square miles — nearly 7% — of the state's tree cover has been lost since 1985, a recent study found

- By Brian Melley

On a mountainsi­de where walls of flames torched the forest on their way toward Lake Tahoe in 2021, blackened trees stand against a gray sky.

“If you can find a live tree, point to it,” Hugh Safford, an environmen­tal science and policy researcher at UC Davis, said touring damage from the Caldor fire, one of the past decade's many massive blazes.

Dead conifers stretch as far as the eye can see. Fire burned so hot that soil was still barren. Granite boulders were charred. Indentatio­ns marked fallen logs that vanished in smoke.

Damage in this area of Eldorado National Forest could be permanent, part of a troubling pattern that threatens a defining characteri­stic of the Sierra Nevada range John Muir once called a “waving sea of evergreens.”

Forest like this is disappeari­ng as increasing­ly intense fires alter landscapes worldwide threatenin­g wildlife, jeopardizi­ng efforts to capture climate-warming carbon and harming water supplies, studies say.

In the U.S. West, a century of fire suppressio­n, logging of large fire-resistant trees, and other practices allowed undergrowt­h to choke forests. Drought has killed millions of conifers or made them susceptibl­e to disease and pests. And a changing climate has brought more intense fires.

“What's it's coming down to is jungles of fuels in forest lands,” Safford said. “You get a big head of steam going behind the fire there, it can burn forever and ever and ever.”

Despite mild wildfire seasons last year and this year, California saw 12 of its largest 20 wildfires in the previous five years. Record rain and snowfall this year that

mostly ended a three-year drought could lead to explosive growth of fire fuels.

California has lost more than 1,760 square miles — nearly 7% — of its tree cover since 1985, a recent study found.

A study of the southern Sierra Nevada — home to Yosemite, Sequoia and Kings Canyon national parks — found nearly a third of conifer forest had transition­ed to other vegetation because of fire, drought or bark beetles in the past decade.

“We’re losing them at a rate … we can’t sustain,” said Brandon Collins, co-author of that report and adjunct forestry professor at UC Berkeley.

Not everyone believes forest is disappeari­ng. Some environmen­talists, like Chad Hanson of the John Muir Project sponsored by the nonprofit Earth Island Institute, believe there’s a “myth of catastroph­ic wildfire” to support logging efforts.

Seedlings are rising from ashes in high-severity patches of fire and dead wood provides wildlife habitat, Hanson said.

“If everything people are hearing was true, there would be a lot more reason for concern,” he said.

Others are concerned failure to properly manage forests can result in intense fire that could harm habitat, the ability to store climate-warming carbon in trees and the quality of snowmelt for farms and cities.

“Areas where mixed conifer burned at high severity, those are all areas that are vulnerable to total forest loss,” said Christy Brigham, chief of resources management and science at Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Parks.

After wildfires in 2020 and 2021 wiped out up to about a fifth of all giant sequoias — once considered almost fireproof — the National Park Service recently embarked on a controvers­ial project to help the mighty trees recover with its largest planting of seedlings in a single grove.

Before the mid-1800s, fires from lightning or set by Indigenous people kept undergrowt­h in check. But after settlers drove out Native Americans and logged forests, fighting fires became the mission to protect the valuable trees and homes.

That has allowed forests to become four to seven times more dense than they once were, Safford said.

“John Muir would not recognize any of this,” he said, gesturing at tightly packed dead trees.

The Caldor fire, which destroyed 1,000 structures, torched forest for the first time in a century, Safford said. Years of drought had made it a tinderbox.

Swaths of Eldorado National Forest burned at such intensity that mature pines went up in flames, their seeds killed. Manzanita and mountain whitethorn — chaparral typical at lower elevations — took root.

A March study of 334 Western wildfires found increasing fire severity made conifer species less likely to regenerate, a problem apt to worsen with climate change.

Along U.S. Highway 50, where the Caldor fire had burned out of control, Safford pointed out a barren slope where forest from a previous fire had been replaced with chaparral and trees were now unlikely to grow.

To reduce wildfire danger, the federal government, which owns nearly 60% of California’s vast forest, agreed with the state in 2020 to reduce fuels on 1,560 square miles a year by 2025.

Fire scientists advocate clearing vegetation by setting fires in ideal conditions and allowing lower-severity fires to burn.

But the Forest Service has historical­ly been risk averse, said Safford, the agency’s regional ecologist for two decades before retiring in 2021. Rather than chance that a fire could blow up, officials have generally snuffed lower-intensity flames that could deliver benefits.

With more than $4 billion from the Bipartisan Infrastruc­ture Law and the Inflation Reduction Act, the Forest Service plans to ramp up thinning where communitie­s are most vulnerable to wildfire.

Susan Britting, executive director of Sierra Forest Legacy, acknowledg­ed any cutting triggers skepticism among conservati­onists because loggers historical­ly took the largest trees.

“In my experience, things like logging, tree removal, even reforestat­ion, those things happen,” Britting said. “The prescribed fire that needs to happen … just gets delayed and punted and not prioritize­d.”

The chance of a burn escaping its perimeter remains a big challenge to the strategy. And thinning often faces court challenges.

Safford, now chief scientist at Vibrant Planet, an environmen­tal public benefits corporatio­n, acknowledg­ed larger trees have been logged in the past but said that’s not now envisioned in thinning projects.

Two-thirds of the rugged Sierra is inaccessib­le or offlimits to logging, so fire will have to do much of the work, he said. But homeowners are anxious prescribed fires will jump perimeters and destroy houses.

“It’s the classic wicked problem where any solution you derive has huge implicatio­ns for other sides of society and the way people want things to be,” Safford said.

 ?? PHOTOS BY BRIAN MELLEY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Hugh Safford, an environmen­tal science and policy researcher at UC Davis, is silhouette­d as he examines damage from the 2021Caldor fire in Eldorado National Forest, near Lake Tahoe, on Oct. 22.
PHOTOS BY BRIAN MELLEY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Hugh Safford, an environmen­tal science and policy researcher at UC Davis, is silhouette­d as he examines damage from the 2021Caldor fire in Eldorado National Forest, near Lake Tahoe, on Oct. 22.
 ?? ?? Safford examines vegetation growing out of the ashes of the 2021Caldor fire, one of the past decades many blazes, in Eldorado National Forest, near Lake Tahoe, on Oct. 22.
Safford examines a conifer sprouting from the ashes of the 2021 Caldor fire in an area of Eldorado National Forest.
Safford examines vegetation growing out of the ashes of the 2021Caldor fire, one of the past decades many blazes, in Eldorado National Forest, near Lake Tahoe, on Oct. 22. Safford examines a conifer sprouting from the ashes of the 2021 Caldor fire in an area of Eldorado National Forest.
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 ?? BRIAN MELLEY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Hugh Safford, an environmen­tal science and policy researcher at UC Davis, counts the rings of a tree killed by the 2021Caldor fire in Eldorado National Forest.
BRIAN MELLEY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Hugh Safford, an environmen­tal science and policy researcher at UC Davis, counts the rings of a tree killed by the 2021Caldor fire in Eldorado National Forest.

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