Wild Fire Prevention

From the first inhabitants of Alabama, there has been an obvious dependency on the vast timberland resources found within the state. The earliest Native Americans relied heavily on the wildlife and plants found within the forests. In successive centuries, settlers depended on the wood and timber to cook, build and warm their homes, and even pave their roads. Eventually, the industrial revolution was in large part generated by the abundance of wood products that provided the wood for ties used in the vast railroad and manufacturing expansions.

Sprawl1Although natural disasters such as wildfire and hurricanes have always had an impact on our forests, the real threat to our timberland assets have been created through man’s exploitation. Such was the case in the early 1900s when the practice of “Cut Out-Get Out” clearly indicated that current thinking believed our timber resources were inexhaustible. Thousands of acres of timberland were cutover and wildfire was rampant. And there was no effort to replant trees on the acreage cut or burned.

Fortunately, conservation-minded citizens and government officials saw the fallacy with such thinking and began the first national efforts to protect timberland. A variety of federal and state agencies were created to help meet these challenges, such as the Alabama Forestry Commission and the Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. Forest landowners began receiving technical help from professional foresters and eventually, the forests were reestablished. Those efforts have since provided the citizens of Alabama an enormous opportunity in the form of job creation, clean water and air, and abundant recreational prospects.

However, Alabama’s forests are once again facing the real and genuine threat from unabated and unplanned growth.Sprawl2 The continued demand for growth from the city to more urban settings is consuming thousands of acres of forestland annually. A recent study calculated that between 1970 and 1990, urban sprawl consumed almost 40,000 acres of forestland in the Mobile Bay area alone.

As our cities and towns grow, the impacts on forest lands are beginning to take a toll. Ownership of forested tracts is being fragmented into smaller units. Forest vegetation and ecosystems are being broken apart into isolated pieces, often replaced by exotic or invasive species. Forested tracts that once provided valuable functions, such as water quality, air quality, wildlife, scenery, recreation, and timber products, are being lost or replaced by other land uses. Like the challenges that faced our state 100 years ago, this one will require state and local governments, private enterprise, and the general public to meet it head-on. Key questions need to be addressed. What are the risks? What are the costs? And what are the answers?

Any solution to a challenge requires public awareness and involvement. That’s especially true in the case of urbanization and its impact on Alabama’s forests. It is the only way we can address this issue and make sure that our state’s forests remain prosperous and productive for all citizens.

 Is Your House Safe from Forest Fires?

VEGETATION SURROUNDING YOUR HOUSE
Six Steps to creating defensible space.

Vegitation Steps 123

 

Vegitation Steps 456

 

SOME COMMON FIRE RESISTENT PLANTS:

Choose plants and trees with high moisture content in the leaves, low oil or resin content, minimal litter and
accumulating debris, limited foliage, and few dead branches, low overall height, open branching habit, and easy
maintenance and pruning.
Large Trees: oaks, maples, ash, hickory, yellow poplar, gum, hackberry
Medium Trees: dogwood, crepe myrtle, persimmon, fruit trees
Shrubs: holly, juniper, nandina, witch hazel, elderberry, azalea, magnolia, lilac
Ground Cover: periwinkle, pachysandra, jasmine, creeping philox, liriopa

For more information visit the

Alabama Forestry Commission Website