Posted from the
- Author: Lorena Anderson
Published on: August 5, 2022
Reposted from UC ANR news
Mechanical thinning of overstocked forests, prescribed burning and managed wildfire now being carried out to enhance fire protection of California's forests provide many benefits, or ecosystem services, that people depend on.
In a paper published in Restoration Ecology, researchers at UC Merced, UC ANR and UC Irvine reported that stakeholders perceived fire...
Tags: ecosystem services (1), forest resilience (4), Roger Bales (3), Safeeq Khan (3), wildfire (79)
Focus Area Tags: Environment
Comments: 0
- Author: Mike Hsu
Published on: June 30, 2022
UCCE forest advisor helps landowners, community groups determine best project options
As Californians prepare for another year of drought and an anticipated intense fire season, landowners and organizations across California have been working to reduce forest fuels – flammable woody material – that can endanger their properties and communities.
For many of them, however, their urgent efforts hit a sizable speed bump: a massive rulebook that describes, amid a thicket of other information, the permits required before people can treat or remove fuels – as well...
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Public Value:
UCANR: Protecting California's natural resources
Tags: California Forest Practice Rules (1), forest (7), forest health (12), fuel reduction (2), fuels treatments (2), rpf (1), wildfire (79), Yana Valachovic (9)
Focus Area Tags: Environment
Comments: 0
- Author: Robyn Schelenz
Published on: April 12, 2022
Reposted from the University of California news
Once outlawed, cultural burns can save our forests from uncontrollable wildfire
Public Value:
UCANR: Protecting California's natural resources
Tags: Beth Rose Middleton (1), cultural burning (1), forest health (12), Lenya Quinn-Davidson (16), prescribed burning (5), Ron Goode (1), wildfire (79)
Focus Area Tags: Environment
Comments: 0
- Author: Jules Bernstein
Published on: March 31, 2022
Reposted from the UC Riverside news
Project examines microbes' role in greenhouse gas emissions
Scientists have found microbes living in the charred soil that wildfires leave behind. They don't know how some fungi and bacteria manage to thrive when everything else has died, but a new project aims to change that.
Public Value:
UCANR: Protecting California's natural resources
Focus Area Tags: Environment
Comments: 0
- Author: Kara Manke
Published on: March 16, 2022
Tags: John Battles (7), Karuk (2), Klamath Mountains (1), Matthew Potts (1), prescribed fire (22), wildfire (79), Yurok (2)
Focus Area Tags: Environment
Comments: 0
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