Yosemite National Park fire managers are
planning to continue ignitions of the Mariposa Grove prescribed fire project on Saturday, October 22, 2016, and Sunday, October 23, 2016. The focus will be in the
upper grove for a total of 55 acres. An estimated 7 to 10 days of active
burn down is anticipated. Fire managers have already successfully
completed 75 acres of ignitions, out of the 137 acre total project.
Smoke will be present
during the prescribed fire and in the Wawona area. Fire managers are
working with the Mariposa County Air Pollution Control District (MCAPCD) to
time the project to coincide with favorable weather and smoke dispersion
conditions. Smoke, affecting health, is always a consideration in the
decision to schedule prescribed fires. A smoke management plan has been
submitted to the MCAPCD, and a burn permit has been issued. A smoke
monitor will be placed in nearby communities.
Historically, natural
fire burned an average of 16,000 acres annually in Yosemite National Park and
played an integral role in shaping Yosemite’s ecosystem. Yosemite’s Fire
Management Program works to balance the protection of life, property, and
natural and cultural resources with the restoration of fire as a natural process.
Due to decades of fire suppression (actively putting out any fire that
started), many areas have become overgrown, unhealthy, and increasingly
vulnerable to catastrophic wildfire.
The Mariposa Grove project is near the top of
the Grove from Wawona Point to the south. Fire managers want to take
advantage of the Mariposa Grove closure to conduct the project. The Grove is
closed to the public because of a major restoration project. Burning at this
time will minimize impacts to public use. Burning in the Mariposa Grove is a
continuous process; the targeted areas have had 1-3 prescribed fires in the
past 30 years, and continued burning is required to maintain healthy forest
conditions. Fire produces the optimum conditions for Giant Sequoia
reproduction and propagation. Fire not only removes the accumulated
layers of dead woody debris exposing nutrient rich mineral soil, but dries the
cones allowing the seeds to shed. In addition, fire creates holes in the
forest canopy, while eliminating shade tolerate competition.
Park employees,
community members, and visitors can expect to see fire personnel from various
federal and state agencies conducting burning operations during the Mariposa
Grove prescribed fire.
For More Information
Fire Information: nancy_phillipe@nps.gov (209)
620-6431
Yosemite National Park Fire Information website:
http://www.nps.gov/yose/blogs/fireinfo.htm.
YosemiteWildland Fire Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/Yosemite-Fire-and-Aviation-124632964255395/
Yosemite Fire Twitter:
https://twitter.com/yosemitefire
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