Fire is uniquely present on military training and testing lands as an element of military land-use since mission readiness requires the delivery of ordnance and pyrotechnics. As such, the management of fire to meet current and future military land-use, stewardship requirements, and future military capabilities is a SERDP research focus. In addition, fire can be one of the most effective ecological processes for restoring historically degraded lands to functioning ecosystems, but the ecological processes are complex and not well understood. This complexity is exemplified in the manner in which the presence of insects, disease, and drought affect forest health and the degree to which fire can be applied as a management tool to improve forest health in the face of these and other challenges.
Moreover, the use of fire for management purposes often is constrained by air quality and smoke safety (visibility) considerations while wildfires, which are unplanned, tend to occur at times, such as the summer, when human populations are most susceptible to smoke exposure due to other concurrent air quality issues. These fires tend to occur during the annual warm seasons, when human populations are often already subject to exposure to elevated ozone and particle concentrations. These fires tend to consume heavier fuels (i.e., woody fuels and not just fine fuels), organic soil horizons, and can smolder for extended periods. The incomplete combustion associated with smoldering may lead to much higher emissions of reduced compounds, including many air toxics. Wildfires also pose higher risks for human safety, assets, training, and unplanned suppression costs. Wildfires may also result in ozone and particulate matter air quality metrics that exceed healthy limits, yet the formation and dispersion of ozone and particulate matter associated with fires remains poorly understood.
Prescribed burning, on the other hand, is commonly performed with the aid of fire weather forecasting systems that can help to minimize direct human exposure to smoke, minimize the impact to transportation activities, and limit fire severity and smoldering combustion by constraining the temperature, humidity, wind, and fuel conditions under which burning occurs.
To support DoD’s continued use of fire as a management tool, SERDP has funded efforts to address how best to characterize the emissions associated with fire and their dispersion in the atmosphere, as well as to understand how fire acts as a disturbance process that resets ecological communities.
Complementary SERDP-Funded Projects: In an effort to mature the science of fire management for DoD unique military land use, SERDP developed the Fire Science Strategy: Resource Conservation and Climate Change (September 2014) and supported projects relating to the science of fire management. The strategy and a brief description of completed and ongoing projects can be found at the SERDP website.