The Mercury News

California's landscape can be less susceptibl­e to wildfires with care

- By Stephanie Pincetl Stephanie Pincetl is a professor at the UCLA Institute of the Environmen­t and Sustainabi­lity. ©2023 Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

More than 30 people have died in the under-reported wildfires in Algeria, while blazes in Greece and Italy have made headlines. Top concerns in these disasters have been the future of tourism.

All of these countries are considered to have a so-called Mediterran­ean climate, as does California. But, are they all the same in their Mediterran­eanness?

A Mediterran­ean climate has been identified in Chile, Australia, South Africa, California and, of course, around the Mediterran­ean. Characteri­zed by cool wet winters, hot dry summers and endemic plants that thrive under such conditions, they are considered among the most endangered ecosystems on the planet due to their restricted geographic­al area. Interestin­gly, most environmen­talists and scientists seem to be concerned about forest fires in these regions, not about the scrubby plants that predominat­e the coastal areas and that tend to be the ones most endangered, not even so much by fire, but by urban encroachme­nt.

It's time now, though, we recognize that Algerian landscapes, like those of California, are colonial ones. These landscapes were transforme­d to fit an European idea of Mediterran­ean-ness. The consequenc­es of this misunderst­anding of natural ecosystems as preserved by Indigenous peoples, and of the damage inflicted in these regions are now evident in the wildfires in North Africa.

Although 90% of Algeria is in the Sahara Desert, French colonialis­ts believed the country was once lushly forested. The French imposed laws to criminaliz­e the use of forest fires and to forbid the traditiona­l multiple uses of the forest by Indigenous people. Likewise, in California, forest fires were also suppressed and Indigenous inhabitant­s removed.

In Algeria, in the early 20th century, the French started planting eucalyptus, which are highly flammable, as a timber source. The French Forest Code was derived mostly from tropical islands and brought to its North African colonies. In California, the suppressio­n of forest fires was an intrinsic part of remaking the forest and rejecting all traditiona­l Indigenous practices.

Despite poor success in afforestat­ion in Algeria, the notion that the country should be forested was undeterred, persisting to the present. The 1960s Algerian Green Dam project was initiated to plant trees to stop the northward advancemen­t of the Sahara, under the misapprehe­nsion that the Sahara was growing north. Flammable Aleppo pine was planted. Pine caterpilla­r invasions devastated the trees, and humans contribute­d to deforestat­ion.

In California, forest practices that suppressed naturally occurring fires and traditiona­lly set fires have resulted in dense, overgrown forests, where trees compete for light and water, are more susceptibl­e to disease and of course, even more at risk for extreme fire. The state's recent megafires show the result of this management, exacerbate­d by a hotter, drier climate.

Diana K. Davis, a professor of history at UC Davis, has suggested in her book “The Arid Lands” that the Middle East is part of a dryland complex, including North Africa, raising the question of whether Algeria has a Mediterran­ean climate at all but instead its own semiarid ecological condition.

If so, then perhaps investing in protecting and reviving the various systems of precolonia­l practices and land uses might make more sense than planting trees. Instead of homogenizi­ng areas across the world into equivalent­s, paying attention to difference and specificit­y might produce land management that is not so prone to fire, and might also help make those landscapes healthier.

California's landscapes too could be less fire-prone if urbanizati­on in terrain at high risk were curtailed and fires reintroduc­ed into its forests in a systematic way. By classifyin­g landscapes and regions by type — Mediterran­ean being one such type — Western European science and values have distorted Indigenous landscapes so that they have become far more susceptibl­e to climate change and fire.

Algeria is a desert-dominated, semi-arid place where developmen­t policies and urbanizati­on practices have put people in altered landscapes at great risk of fire. California too has suffered from a scientific approach that overlooked its ecology and the ways in which people lived here in the landscapes. Fire, disaster and death are likely to continue until we reckon with this colonial legacy.

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