Forest fire aftermath

Title Info
Common name Pine, Ponderosa; Aspen
Scientific name Pinus ponderosa; Populus tremuloides
Taxonomic group Pinaceae; Salicaceae
Source Dan L. Perlman
Ecosystems Forests
Forests Temperate coniferous forest
Change over time Disturbance; Succession
Succession Secondary succession
Disturbance Fire ecology
Lessons Disturbance
Date July 13, 2000 - July 14, 2000
Location Pine,Colorado,USA,North America

Patchy effects of the Hi Meadow fire, Colorado. Due to a combination of active fire fighting and random events, certain patches of forest and individual trees were badly burned, while others were spared. The aspens in this image happened to fare better than some of the Ponderosa pines. Note, too, the regrowth on the forest floor, where herbs have started growing in the 28 or 29 days since the fire. The fire burned nearly 11,000 acres (17 square miles or 44 square km) of Ponderosa pine forest, which, under natural conditions experience frequent low-intensity fires. However, like much of the US West, decades of fire suppression had allowed fuel loads of dead branches and undergrowth to build to dangerous levels and this fire was hot, intense, and fast moving. Due to very active fire fighting, the nearby ridge was only lightly burned although the ridge in the middle distance was totally incinerated. The fire lasted about ten days in mid-June, 2000, destroyed 51 houses, and cost approximately $8 million in suppression and rehabilitation plus another $5-10 million in property loss, according to the US Forest Service. A single cigarette was determined to be the cause of the fire (investigators actually found the cigarette butt after the fire).

The Hi Meadow fire burned nearly 11,000 acres (17 square miles or 44 square km) of Ponderosa pine forests, which, under natural conditions experience frequent low-intensity fires. However, like much of the US West, decades of fire suppression had allowed fuel loads of dead branches and undergrowth to build to dangerous levels, and this fire was hot, intense, and fast moving. The fire lasted about ten days in mid-June, 2000, destroyed 51 houses, and cost approximately $8 million in suppression and rehabilitation plus another $5-10 million in property loss, according to the US Forest Service. A single cigarette was determined to be the cause of the fire (investigators actually found the cigarette butt after the fire).