Selecting appropriate vegetation treatments in shrubland and PJ ecosystems in a wildfire crisis landscape: Evaluating resilience and resistance

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This guide identifies seven primary components that largely determine the outcomes of vegetation treatments to reduce fuels and maintain or increase resilience to disturbance and resistance to invasive annual plants. The components are (1) characteristics of the ecological type, (2) current, pre-treatment vegetation, (3) disturbance and management history, (4) fuel characteristics and appropriate treatments, (4) treatment severity and ecological response, (6) seeding considerations, and (7) post-treatment monitoring and management. Key questions and a set of tools are provided to assess the components. The guide provides information to (1) evaluate resilience and resistance for potential treatment areas, (2) determine likely effects of treatments on fuels, fire behavior, and ecological response, and (3) select appropriate treatments, including the need to seed. An evaluation score sheet is included for assessing relative resilience and resistance and seeding needs. The Pine Valley Ranger District of the Dixie National Forest, part of a USDA Forest Service “Wildfire Crisis Landscape,” is used as a case study. Maps and data summaries included for the district are dominant shrubland and pinyon-juniper ecological types, burn probabilities, cover of the invasive annual, cheatgrass, proxy soil temperature and moisture regimes, relative resilience and resistance, pinyon-juniper stand characteristics, and habit for mule deer and pinyon jay.

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