High Intensity Fire is Great For Wildlife

Patches of high intensity fire in mature and old forest create one of the richest forest habitat types (“complex early seral forest”), with abundant standing dead trees (snags), native shrubs, downed logs and naturally regenerating conifers essential to healthy and productive wildlife populations.

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Black-Backed Woodpeckers Need It To Survive

Blacked Backed Woodpeckers like their mature and old growth forest well done. Each bird eats over 13,500 wood boring beetle larvae per year to survive – this means lots of dead trees (over 100 per acre) covering a large area (approximately 300 acres per pair).

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California Spotted Owls Choose It For Foraging

Spotted owls prefer unburned mature forest or mature forest that burns at lower intensity for nesting and roosting, but use mature forest that burns at high intensity to hunt the small mammals that they need to eat to survive. Without this habitat in their territories, populations decline.

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Pacific Fisher is a Very Rare Carnivore

Once thought to avoid higher intensity fire areas, it has been found to select dense old forest in both its unburned state (for denning and resting) and after it is burned in a higher intensity fire (for hunting small mammals).

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