The Daily Press

Pa. private forest landowners want to use controlled fire to manage their woods

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UNIVERSITY PARK — Managers of public forests in Pennsylvan­ia have been using controlled burns to manage state-owned tracts to promote tree species such as oak, reduce the growth of invasive plant species and even reduce tick population­s for more than a decade. Now a study by Penn State researcher­s indicates that owners of private forest land in the state would like to use prescribed fire to manage their woods, too.

The research also revealed that many private forest landowners are willing to pay to use controlled fire as a management tool, said researcher Jesse Kreye, assistant research professor of fire and natural resources management in the College of Agricultur­al Sciences.

Prescribed burning is important for the ecological health of fire-dependent forests, noted Kreye, who has been involved in private forestland controlled burning programs in the South and the West. However, he noted, there is little economic research examining landowner preference­s for living with fire in the modern world.

“We know a lot about the ecological role of fire in our forest landscapes and how prescribed burning can be used to achieve beneficial outcomes,” he said. “But without understand­ing the human dimensions aspect, we can’t fully evaluate its potential. This research was aimed at understand­ing the value of reintroduc­ing fire into the private forest landscape.”

The study, which was spearheade­d by Arun Regmi, doctoral degree candidate in the Department of Ecosystem Science and Management, was a collaborat­ion between Kreye and Melissa Kreye, assistant professor of forest resource management, who is also in the same department.

“My background and expertise are in the physical and ecological aspects of wildland fire, while Melissa’s are in natural resource policy, economics and social science,” said Jesse Kreye. “Interdisci­plinary collaborat­ions like these allow us to go beyond the ecological science toward a better understand­ing of how that science might actually be applied.”

Compared to southeaste­rn and western regions of the United States, there is still very little prescribed fire applied to private lands in the Northeast, the researcher­s explained. They suggest that landowner interest in prescribed fire in this region previously had not been explored and could provide insights into how society may want to live with fire in the future. In several states, such as Florida, hundreds of thousands of acres are burned in a controlled way each year to manage private forest land.

“Forest landowners in Pennsylvan­ia could have that option, too,” Jesse Kreye said.

Fire was used historical­ly in Pennsylvan­ia, the researcher­s point out, and the state’s forests have changed a lot over the last century because of a lack of fire. Because there was considerab­le interest in bringing fire back to help restore the landscape, the General Assembly in 2009 passed legislatio­n called the Prescribed Burning Practices Act.

The law changed liability statutes and essentiall­y gave land managers in the state who observe a suite of specified precaution­s the ability to use prescribed fire as a forestmana­gement tool. This has since resulted in increased burning, but mostly on public lands. For example, in 2021 a total of 21,901 acres of public lands were prescribed burned by state agencies, whereas only 476 acres of private forests were burned.

“But even though agencies such as the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Conservati­on and Natural Resources and the Game Commission have been burning on their properties over the last 14 years, private landowners have largely been unable to use the tool,” Jesse Kreye said. “And there are still a lot of people in Pennsylvan­ia who aren’t aware of why they should be using controlled fire and what benefits it provides.”

About 16.9 million acres (58%) of the state is covered by forestland, of which 70% are privately owned. To assess private forest landowners’ willingnes­s to pay for various prescribed fire programs in Pennsylvan­ia, the researcher­s mailed a carefully constructe­d survey comprised of 63 questions to 551 private forest landowners in Pennsylvan­ia.

The questions asked about land ownership and management objectives, landowner demographi­cs, knowledge about prescribed fire, perceived risk, and trust in trained controlled burn personnel. Survey responses were collected from 243 landowners, resulting in a 44% response rate. Most respondent­s were classified as having limited experience with prescribed fire, but many also had lowrisk perception­s about prescribed fire and high trust in prescribed fire implemento­rs, such as burn bosses.

In the findings recently published in Forest Policy and Economics, the researcher­s reported that most forest landowners surveyed (66%) elected to enroll in at least one of 16 proposed controlled­burn programs and almost a quarter of landowners were willing to pay up to $200 per acre. Analyzing survey responses, the researcher­s determined that the value of prescribed fire to Pennsylvan­ia across all private forest lands was estimated to range from $11 to $19 per acre.

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