Why wildfires have gotten worse -- and what we can do about it | Paul Hessburg

Why wildfires have gotten worse -- and what we can do about it | Paul Hessburg

Wildfires and Forest Management: Understanding the Crisis

The Increasing Threat of Wildfires

  • In recent years, western forests have experienced large and destructive wildfires, raising concerns about their future for families and communities.
  • An area larger than Oregon has burned in the last decade, with a significant rise in "megafires" exceeding 100,000 acres.
  • Current fire-management practices need urgent changes to prevent further loss of forests that may not recover within our lifetimes.

Historical Context of Forest Landscapes

  • Today's forests differ significantly from those 100-150 years ago; historical landscapes were characterized by a patchy distribution of open and closed canopy forests.
  • Panoramic photos from the 1930s illustrate these diverse forest structures, which included frequent small fires that shaped the landscape.

Factors Influencing Fire Behavior

  • Topography, elevation, and weather patterns played crucial roles in shaping both forest growth and fire behavior historically.
  • Different forest types exhibited varying fire frequencies and severities; open-grown trees experienced frequent but less severe fires compared to denser forests.

The Role of Native Americans

  • For thousands of years, Native Americans managed landscapes through intentional burning practices to promote food growth and manage wildlife grazing.
  • Their seasonal burning strategies helped avoid uncontrolled summer wildfires while maintaining ecological balance.

Impact of European Settlement

  • European settlement introduced livestock grazing in the mid-1800s, disrupting natural fire cycles by consuming grasses that facilitated historical fires.
  • The catastrophic "Big Burn" wildfire in 1910 shifted public perception towards viewing wildfires as threats rather than natural processes.

Shift Towards Fire Suppression

  • Following the Big Burn, aggressive fire suppression became standard practice across U.S. public lands, leading to a dramatic reduction in wildfire occurrences (95%-98% suppression).

The Changing Landscape of Forests and Fire Management

The Transformation of Forest Landscapes

  • Over the past century, forests have undergone significant changes, with more trees than the landscape can support.
  • Historically shaped by small to medium-sized fires, forests now exhibit a dense carpet of trees due to a lack of fire over 150 years.
  • Increased tree density leads to easier spread of diseases and insect outbreaks, threatening large forest areas.

The Growing Threat of Wildfires

  • With hotter, drier summers and longer fire seasons (40 to 80 days longer), climatologists predict that burned areas will double or triple in the next three decades.
  • More than 60% of new housing is being built in high-risk wildfire zones, increasing vulnerability during fire events.

Addressing Forest Management Challenges

  • To combat these issues, restoring natural fire patterns is essential for reducing future fire severity.
  • Tools such as prescribed burning can help thin out trees and reduce dead fuels systematically.

Implementing Effective Fire Management Strategies

  • Combining mechanical thinning with prescribed burns can create already-burned patches that resist future fires while capturing commercial value.
  • Prescribed burning produces significantly less smoke compared to wildfires but faces regulatory challenges as it is treated as an avoidable nuisance.

The Social Dimension of Fire Management

  • Managed wildfires should be utilized strategically instead of extinguishing all fires; this approach helps restore ecological balance.
  • Public support for prescribed burning and managed wildfires is lacking; many prefer to eliminate fires entirely without understanding the necessity for controlled burns.
Channel: TED
Video description

Megafires, individual fires that burn more than 100,000 acres, are on the rise in the western United States -- the direct result of unintentional yet massive changes we've brought to the forests through a century of misguided management. What steps can we take to avoid further destruction? Forest ecologist Paul Hessburg confronts some tough truths about wildfires and details how we can help restore the natural balance of the landscape. Check out more TED Talks: http://www.ted.com The TED Talks channel features the best talks and performances from the TED Conference, where the world's leading thinkers and doers give the talk of their lives in 18 minutes (or less). Look for talks on Technology, Entertainment and Design -- plus science, business, global issues, the arts and more. Follow TED on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/TEDTalks Like TED on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TED Subscribe to our channel: https://www.youtube.com/TED