Published: Nov. 5, 2014

A new study led by the University of California, Berkeley and involving the University of Colorado Boulder indicates the current response to wildfires around the world鈥攁ggressively fighting them鈥攊s not making society less vulnerable to such events.

The study suggests the key is to treat fires like other natural hazards鈥攊ncluding earthquakes, severe storms and flooding鈥攂y learning to coexist, adapt and identify vulnerabilities. The new study indicates government-sponsored firefighting and land management policies may actually encourage development on inherently hazardous landscapes, leading to an amplification of human losses to wildfire.

鈥淲e don鈥檛 try to 鈥榝ight鈥 earthquakes鈥攚e anticipate them in the way we plan communities, build buildings and prepare for emergencies. We don鈥檛 think that way about fire, but our review indicates that we should,鈥 said lead author Max Moritz of UC Berkeley鈥檚 College of Natural Resources. 鈥淗uman losses will only be mitigated when land-use planning takes fire hazards into account in the same manner as other natural hazards, like floods, hurricanes and earthquakes.鈥

A paper on the subject appears in the Nov. 6 issue of听Nature.

鈥淲e are in dire need of a more sustainable coexistence with wildfire,鈥 said Research Scientist Tania Schoennagel of CU-Boulder鈥檚 Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research, a study co-author.听 鈥淯nless we plan for fire as an inevitable and natural process, it will continue to have serious social and ecological consequences.鈥

The study looked at research findings from three continents: North America, Australia and Europe. The scientists studied different kinds of natural fires, what drives them in various ecosystems, differing public responses and the critical wildland-urban interface. Additionally, the scientists analyzed fire data from the western U.S., the Mediterranean Basin and all of Australia.

鈥淲e have mostly approached wildfire management from the ecological side through fuel reduction,鈥 Schoennagel said. 鈥淲hile this can be effective, it can only achieve so much. To more successfully coexist with wildfire we also need preventative tools, like residential land-use planning, zoning guidelines, fire-resistant building codes and fuel management on and around homes, for example.鈥

Although a September 2014 study involving Schoennagel found the perception that Colorado鈥檚 Front Range fires are becoming increasingly severe does not hold much water scientifically, the rapid expansion of the wildland-urban interface is helping to wreak unprecedented havoc on Colorado homes in the line of fire, she said.

The 2010 Fourmile Canyon Fire in Boulder County, for example, which burned 167 homes over 6,181 acres, topped the 2002 Hayman Fire鈥攖he largest Colorado wildfire on record at the time鈥攚hich burned 133 homes over 138,144 acres in four counties. The 2012 High Park Fire in Larimer County then topped the Fourmile Canyon Fire by burning 259 homes over 87,284 acres. Keeping with the trend, the 2012 Waldo Canyon Fire in El Paso County burned 346 homes over 18,297 acres. It was followed by the 2013 Black Forest Fire near Colorado Springs, which burned 486 homes over 14,280 acres, and holds 鈥渢he record for now,鈥 said Schoennagel.

鈥淲e have learned that forest thinning is rarely effective under extreme burning conditions, and the severity of fire in adjacent forests has little to do with whether a home burns,鈥 said Schoennagel, who also is affiliated with CU-Boulder鈥檚 geography department. 鈥淪olely relying on public forest management to prevent homes burning by wildfire is simply barking up the wrong tree. We need more integrated solutions that cross the public-private land boundary to help us coexist with inevitable wildfire.鈥

In addition to updated land-use and zoning regulations, the researchers recommend updating building codes, implementing vegetation management strategies and evaluating evacuation and warning systems. The team also recommends developing household and community plans for surviving 鈥渟tay-and-defend鈥 fire situations and developing better maps of fire hazards, ecosystems and climate change effects.

In the western U.S., there has been a 60 percent expansion in the wildland-urban interface since 1970, primarily in forests that have a history of moderate- to high-severity fires. Only 16 percent of the wildland-urban interface in the western U.S. currently is developed (20 percent in Colorado) but those numbers are rising, according to the nonprofit research group Headwaters Economics, which is based in Bozeman, Montana.

Conducting carefully planned, prescribed burns can help manage the severity of wildfires in some ecosystems, said the study authors. Both prescribed burns and natural wildfires can stimulate vegetation regeneration, promote vegetation diversity, provide habitat for wildlife and sustain other natural ecosystem activities like nutrient cycling.

According to the authors, climate change will inevitably complicate management strategies. In Colorado, for example, where temperatures have climbed 2 degrees Fahrenheit since 1977, a substantial increase in Front Range wildfire activity is expected, said Schoennagel.听

In addition to UC Berkeley and CU-Boulder, the Nature study included authors from the U.S. Forest Service, the University of California-Santa Barbara, the Conservation Biology Institute in Corvallis, Oregon, and four research institutes in Australia.

鈥淎 different view of wildfire is urgently needed,鈥 said Moritz. 鈥淲e must accept wildfire as a crucial and inevitable natural process on many landscapes.听 There is no alternative. The path we are on will lead to a deepening听 of our fire-related problems worldwide, which will only become worse as the climate changes.鈥

Contact:
Max Moritz, UC Berkeley, 510-642-7329
mmoritz@berkeley.edu
Tania Schoennagel, CU-Boulder, 303-818-5166
tania.schoennagel@colorado.edu
Jim Scott, CU-Boulder media relations, 303-492-3114
jim.scott@colorado.edu

wildfire

A new study indicates society might be better off treating wildfires like other natural disasters, including hurricanes, floods and earthquakes.

鈥淲e are in dire need of a more sustainable coexistence with wildfire,鈥 said Research Scientist Tania Schoennagel of CU-Boulder鈥檚 Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research, a study co-author. 鈥淯nless we plan for fire as an inevitable and natural process, it will continue to have serious social and ecological consequences.鈥