| One Size Does Not Fit All |
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Before they were severely altered by nineteenth- and twentieth-century land management practices, southwestern ponderosa pine forests were generally much more open than many of today’s stands, but they did vary in structure and density. Sitgreaves National Forest, Arizona, 1931 (left); near Grandview Point, Arizona, 1909 (right). Western forests are diverse, and a restoration treatment that makes sense in one forest type or region may be entirely inappropriate for another. Some forests, such as high-elevation spruce-fir forests, are adapted to infrequent stand-replacing fires that may occur only every few hundred years. Others, such as the arid ponderosa pine forests of the Southwest, are adapted to frequent low-intensity ground fires. It is essential to discuss forest fire and forest health issues in a manner that recognizes these differences. Even southwestern ponderosa pine forests were historically diverse. Many, but not all, areas supported open, “park-like” stands. Surveys by early foresters reveal that some areas had as few as 23 trees over 4 inches in diameter per acre, but other areas—especially in canyons, on north-facing slopes, and at higher elevations where ponderosa pine begins to mix with other conifer species—supported considerably more trees (Fulé et al. 1997; Fulé et al. 2003). Restoration treatments that seek to emulate historic conditions must take this site-by-site variability into account. There is, in other words, no single tree density per acre that can be used as a restoration target. Nor can any blanket prescription describe exactly how trees remaining after a restoration treatment should be distributed across the landscape. Decisions about how to conduct restoration, then, must always be made on a local basis. They must be based both on a scientific understanding of local site characteristics and on consideration of other factors, including social, economic, and political goals. Involvement of local communities, too, is vital both in reaching a common understanding of management goals and in achieving public acceptance of restoration work. |
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