The controversial management of fire in the national forests of Idaho and western Montana

In Idaho and Montana just like in the rest of the U.S. Rocky Mountains, a part of the population wants to settle near forests perceived as environmental amenities. The regional net migration has been positive for about twenty-five years. Wildfires with variable intensity regularly destroy properties...

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Main Author: Nicolas Barbier
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institut de Géographie Alpine
Series:Revue de Géographie Alpine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/rga/2696
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author Nicolas Barbier
author_facet Nicolas Barbier
author_sort Nicolas Barbier
collection DOAJ
description In Idaho and Montana just like in the rest of the U.S. Rocky Mountains, a part of the population wants to settle near forests perceived as environmental amenities. The regional net migration has been positive for about twenty-five years. Wildfires with variable intensity regularly destroy properties. Some of them kill people. Regionally, they are an important human, economic, political and environmental issue. Their significance is likely to increase due to global warming. A lot of these fires are ignited within the huge national forests of the montane zone (600 to 2,100 meters of elevation in the study area) dominated by Ponderosa pines and Douglas firs. Between the end of the conquest of the West and the 1970s, land uses have altered these forests and the fire regimes that affect them. For about four decades, managers have been involved in a partial and controversial restoration of pre-conquest fire regimes and forests they used to shape.
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spelling doaj.art-bc092ebd705b49cbab7008eec65f77d02024-02-14T15:01:52ZengInstitut de Géographie AlpineRevue de Géographie Alpine0035-11211760-7426103410.4000/rga.2696The controversial management of fire in the national forests of Idaho and western MontanaNicolas BarbierIn Idaho and Montana just like in the rest of the U.S. Rocky Mountains, a part of the population wants to settle near forests perceived as environmental amenities. The regional net migration has been positive for about twenty-five years. Wildfires with variable intensity regularly destroy properties. Some of them kill people. Regionally, they are an important human, economic, political and environmental issue. Their significance is likely to increase due to global warming. A lot of these fires are ignited within the huge national forests of the montane zone (600 to 2,100 meters of elevation in the study area) dominated by Ponderosa pines and Douglas firs. Between the end of the conquest of the West and the 1970s, land uses have altered these forests and the fire regimes that affect them. For about four decades, managers have been involved in a partial and controversial restoration of pre-conquest fire regimes and forests they used to shape.https://journals.openedition.org/rga/2696fireIdahomanagementMontananational forest
spellingShingle Nicolas Barbier
The controversial management of fire in the national forests of Idaho and western Montana
Revue de Géographie Alpine
fire
Idaho
management
Montana
national forest
title The controversial management of fire in the national forests of Idaho and western Montana
title_full The controversial management of fire in the national forests of Idaho and western Montana
title_fullStr The controversial management of fire in the national forests of Idaho and western Montana
title_full_unstemmed The controversial management of fire in the national forests of Idaho and western Montana
title_short The controversial management of fire in the national forests of Idaho and western Montana
title_sort controversial management of fire in the national forests of idaho and western montana
topic fire
Idaho
management
Montana
national forest
url https://journals.openedition.org/rga/2696
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