A16 NEWS Wallowa County Chieftain Puzzle Solutions WORD SEARCH Yo c u e r for Sour Ho ome Home-delivered H Hom o me- m e-d e -de - del d eli e liv l ive i ver v ve ere e er red r ed e d or o r Online O On nl lin in i n e @w ine @ @wa @wallowa.com wal w a al l llo l lo o owa low w a co wa c o m com Wednesday, June 8, 2022 OSU finds ways to slow wildfires in critical sagebrush rangelands By ALEX BAUMHARDT Oregon Capital Chronicle Nearly 45% of historic sagebrush ecosystems in the Great Basin — 200,000 square miles of Califor- nia, Idaho, Nevada, Ore- gon, Utah and Wyoming — have been lost to inva- sive plants, grasses and wildfires, according to the federal Bureau of Land Management. To slow the frequency and severity of such fires, scientists at Oregon State University undertook a 10-year study of the long- term effects of popular fire prevention and mitigation methods to see which ones were successful over many years, and which only had short-term impacts. In a new report pub- lished in the scientific jour- nal Ecosphere, those scien- tists concluded that thinning vegetation across the sage- brush landscape was the most effective, long-term method for mitigating wild- fire spread and severity. Other methods, such as pre- scribed burns and the use of herbicides to kill nonnative grasses and invasive tree and shrub species were only effective in the short term. The OSU scientists teamed up with specialists from Great Basin states, including Eva Strand, a pro- fessor of rangeland ecology and management at the Uni- versity of Idaho. She said studying this over a decade gave scientists a broader perspective. “A treatment might be Mitch Maxson/The Nature Conservancy To slow the frequency and severity of such fires, scientists at Oregon State University undertook a 10-year study of the long-term effects of popular fire prevention and mitigation methods to see which ones were successful over many years. followed for a couple years, but there’s no looking at the long-term response,” she said. “With this, we could see for how long these meth- ods are effective in mitigat- ing wildfire.” The scientists didn’t ignite fires but used com- puter models to study how each treatment — thinning, herbicides or prescribed burns — could impact the speed of a fire’s spread and the height of the flames. In their study, the scien- tists found that herbicides left behind dead vegetation that could create hotter fires with higher flames. They found prescribed burns were effective short term, but long term, invasive grasses quickly returned and rees- tablished themselves, creat- ing a greater fire risk. Strand said their findings will also impact firefighter safety in a wildfire. Prepare for power outages today WITH A HOME STANDBY GENERATOR FREE 7-Year Extended Warranty* $0 MONEY DOWN + LOW MONTHLY PAYMENT OPTIONS Contact a Generac dealer for full terms and conditions REQUEST A FREE QUOTE CALL NOW BEFORE THE NEXT POWER OUTAGE ONLINE (and in print!) Our e-Edition is available 24/7 on any device everywhere you are • iPad • iPhone • iPod Touch • Android • Kindle All apps are free to download. Must be a subscriber to view e-Edition. SUBSCRIBE TODAY 541-426-4567 | wallowa.com (877) 557-1912 *To qualify, consumers must request a quote, purchase, install and activate the generator with a participating dealer. Call for a full list of terms and conditions. A $695 Value! “We were able to model how they actually impact fire behavior,” she said. “We can tell which methods cre- ate shorter flame lengths, so firefighters can approach it in a different way.” Oversight by BLM The bulk of sagebrush ecosystems in the Great Basin are overseen by the BLM, which is currently involved in a project to cre- ate fuel breaks along 435 miles of roads throughout sagebrush habitat along the Oregon-Idaho-Nevada bor- der in the Great Basin. These are areas where the BLM is reducing vegetation like grasses and trees in order to reduce the probability of a fire spreading and growing in height. The scientists hope their research can inform the methods the agency adopts to create those fuel breaks. “We need to be imple- menting strategies that pre- serve our good-condition sagebrush steppe areas and get ahead of this invasive grass and fire feedback cycle that we’re in,” said Lisa Ellsworth, lead author of the study and a range ecologist at OSU, in a statement. Ellsworth said that sage- brush ecosystems are among the most fragile ecosys- tems on the North American continent.