WHAT

Landscape Treatments

The vision of the National Cohesive Wildland Fire Management Strategy asks us, as a nation, to live with wildland fire. To achieve this sweeping vision, the Cohesive Strategy has three goals: fire adapted communities, safe and effective wildfire response, and resilient landscapes. We can’t achieve any of these goals without the fundamental interaction between people and place.

The phrase “landscape treatment” means different things to each of us and it depends on our experience and perspective. Landscape treatment can mean a fuel break, roadside thinning, completion of an environmental analysis document, prescribed fire, action by land management agencies, collaborative work between residents and organizations to complete mutual goals, multi-party monitoring and more.

This page has resources, examples and tools for many aspects of landscape treatment.

Considerations

1
To live with fire, communities across the nation are using thinning, grazing, prescribed fire and other treatments. Efforts like Prescribed Fire Training Exchanges (TREX) spark and support community-based fire management and create more resilient landscapes. Learn with and from other practitioners who have community based burning programs!
2
Tribes, such as the Yurok and Karuk tribes, are reviving cultural fire practices to restore and nurture the land and people and reclaim their right to utilize fire. It is important to recognize and support the knowledge and practices of Indigenous peoples in this work.

EXPLORE Landscape Treatments RESOURCES

  • WHO

  • WHERE

  • FORMAT

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Found 47 Results

Increasing use of prescribed fire: Barriers and opportunities

Research
Schultz, Courtney A. ; McCaffrey, Sarah M. ; Huber-Stearns, Heidi R.
Summary of a study on the most commonly cited barriers to putting prescribed fire on the ground in a study involving RMRS scientists and partners. Read More

Hupa Fire: Traditional and Cultural Fire Management

Video
Hoopa Fire Department
This video from the Hoopa Fire Department, is a story told by Hupa culture keepers about their relationship to fire. Read More

How We Formed, Funded and Dispatched a State and Private Lands Burned Area Response Team

Blog Post / Story
Craig Nelson, Fire Adapted Communities Learning Network Blog
This blog, written by Craig Nelson of the Okanogan Conservation District and published by the Fire Adapted Communities Learning Network, provides insight into post-fire work on private lands. Read More

Good Fire: Restoring New Mexico’s Forests

Video
The Nature Conservancy
Decades of fire suppression have caused wildfires to become more severe, but prescribed fire turns a fire of “chance” into a fire of “choice.” Through partnership and collaboration, The Nature Conservancy is bringing back fire to protect forests and communities. Read More

Fuel Breaks that Work

Guide / Pamphlet / Handout
Kevin Moriarty, Lance Okerson, Mike Pellant
This factsheet provides “a framework for the placement, use, and effectiveness of established fuel breaks for protecting sagebrush ecosystems.” Read More

From Ideas to Action: A Guide to Funding and Authorities for Collaborative Restoration

Website / Interactive Map
Rural Voices for Conservation Coalition
“This guidebook presents a menu of USDA Forest Service and Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) tools and programs available to implement land stewardship on public and private lands, as well as insider tips and lessons learned. It is intended to increase understanding of the options for effectivecollaborative forest management. While not exhaustive, this primer represents... Read More

Fire Works! Karuk Tribe Climate Change Projects Website

Website / Interactive Map
Karuk Tribe
Resources, videos, links and research all around the Karuk Tribe’s relationship to fire and an introduction to some of their history and current programs and projects. Read More

Fire Safe Marin

Website / Interactive Map
Fire Safe Marin
This website provides comprehensive information for residents working to better live with wildland fire. Contains a wide variety of resources, covering everything from goat grazing to fire-resistant coatings. While focused on the residents of Marin County, California, there are resources here for residents across the west. Read More

Fire Resources and Information for Managers, Ranchers, and Homeowners

Website / Interactive Map
University of California Cooperative Extension
Tools and information for land managers, ranchers, and homeowners focused on not only fire science, but also how to prepare for, respond to, and recover from wildfires. Read More

Fire in the Shrub-Steppe: Resource Round-Up

Blog Post / Story
Hilary Lundgren, Washington State Fire Adapted Communities Learning Network
The Washington State Fire Adapted Communities Learning Network led a Fire in the Shrub-steppe Webinar series in 2020. The webinar series brought forward valuable conversations, lessons and tools needed to protect and restore this special ecosystem. This blog post contains links to the webinar series as well as additional resources. Read More
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Photo Credit: Canva Creative Commons
Community Profile
Fire Adaptation in the Field
Asheville, North Carolina

The Forest Stewards Guild has been working with partners near Asheville, North Carolina to help residents both understand the need for prescribed fire on the landscape as well as have the opportunity to experience the act of treating the landscape. “Learn-and-Burn” events provide residents, land managers, and partners with the opportunity to work together to build a foundation for future landscape treatments.