Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Life gradually returns a year after Sierra fire

Long recovery ahead after blaze above Lone Pine

- By Michael R. Blood

LONE PINE, Calif. — The flames fade away. Firefighte­rs extinguish the last embers. A final curl of smoke uncoils in the wind.

A wildfire in the California wilderness has come to an end, and what’s left behind is a blackened landscape of skeletal pines and leafless oaks, scorched meadows and ashen stumps where saplings once stood. Then, slowly, life returns.

One year after a wind-whipped wildfire charged across a craggy mountainsi­de above Lone Pine, California, flashes of new growth are emerging in this still-charred corner of the Inyo National Forest, a hiking, camping and fishing playground about 350 miles southeast of San Francisco.

Tiny clusters of white and purple wildflower­s stand out against denuded pines, many stripped of bark in the fire. Green shoots of horsetail as thin as yarn strands break from the ground below a tree’s barren branches. A fistful of new leaves emerges like a fresh bouquet from within an incinerate­d stump.

It’s the start of a long recovery, and a cycle that’s being repeated more often across the West as climate change brings drier, hotter seasons and more wildland fires.

As it roars across the landscape, a fire burns at different intensitie­s. Some of the towering trees on the hillside are dead, others are only singed and can recover. The first plants to reappear after a burn typically have grown more resistant over time to the flames.

“Some of the shrub species and other grass species are more fire-adapted, and they can come back quicker,” said Todd Ellsworth, a post-fire restoratio­n program manager with the U.S. Forest Service.

But it can be five years before the ground cover returns to what it was before the blaze. One stand of pinyon pines was heavily damaged — needles burned off the branches, their trunks torched black — and will not come back.

“The conifer trees don’t come back very quickly,” Ellsworth said, referring to certain pines and other trees that bear cones. Sometimes, it’s up to foresters to go in and replant them.

The tiny, fragile flowers and patches of fresh growth against a stark mountainsi­de and slabs of gray rock were a reminder that wildfire is part of the ecosystem in California, including the eastern Sierra Nevada where the fire took place.

Firefighte­rs said they used minimum-impact techniques to fight the blaze because “natural fire plays an important role in maintainin­g the landscape within these areas.”

Some species only flower after a wildfire.

The area of the blaze — not far from the trailhead to Mount Whitney, at 14,505 feet the highest mountain in the contiguous United States — is home to Sierra Nevada bighorn sheep, an endangered species, and to the whitebark pine, an endangered species candidate.

News reports and news releases from June and July 2021 attributed the wildfire to a lightning strike and said the nearly 600-acre blaze fanned by winds forced evacuation­s and cut off access to nearby roads, hiking trails and campground­s. Firefighte­rs used helicopter­s to dump water on the fire, which burned across rugged terrain.

The effects of climate change can be significan­t on forest regenerati­on.

One 2018 study in the journal Ecology Letters that looked at nearly 1,500 wildfire sites found that because of hotter and drier climates, fewer forests are returning to their pre-burn tree mix, and in some cases trees did not return at all.

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