Prescribed Burning in Oklahoma
Many people don’t understand
the role of fire in the ecosystem. Fire
has been and still is an essential part of maintaining healthy native
grassland, shrubland, and forest ecosystems and has positive impacts. In fact, fire applied in a prescribed manner
is a valuable management tool used by many Oklahoma farmers and ranchers to
restore and maintain healthy plant communities.
Oklahoma’s native ecosystems are fire dependent and without fire, these
plant communities become dysfunctional and unproductive.
Prescribed fire is the use of fire applied under specific
conditions, following appropriate planning, which allows the fire to be
confined to a specific area in order to accomplish a planned land management objective. Prescribed fire is used to improve the
health, appearance, recreational value, and productivity of the land. By using prescribed fire, landowners can
restore and maintain forests, shrublands, and grasslands as diverse, healthy
ecosystems and reduce wildland fuels loads.
Proper
planning for prescribed burns includes understanding fire behavior, understanding
and monitoring weather
conditions and the development of a prescribed burn
plan which contains a prescription based on desired results.
Fire has played a key role in the development of
are
actively growing. For warm season plants
this would be during the summer months and for cool season plants, the winter
months. Bunchgrasses
like little bluestem accumulate dead material above the root crown and the
center of the plant dies over time. After a fire, it sometimes appears that the
plant was killed when in fact the center of the plant was already dead. This
can be observed by examining burned and unburned plants in the same area. In
contrast, rhizomatous grasses, such as big bluestem, have growing points below
the soil surface and do not accumulate fuel next to the root crown. Woody plants are adapted to fire by location
of buds or protective bark. Most woody plants resprout if top growth or apical
buds are killed. Once apical dominance is lost, dormant basal buds below the
soil surface begin growth. Some woody plants such as eastern redcedar lack
basal buds and do not resprout. Many
woody plants have thick bark and are adapted to intense fire. Eastern
cottonwood, post oak, and shortleaf pine are examples of fire tolerant woody
plants.
For further assistance in developing a prescribed
burn plan, contact your local NRCS or Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service Office.
Offices are located in every county in