Rethinking Dry Forest Management in a Warming Climate
La Cueva, Santa Fe National Forest. From left to right: Sam Hitt, president of the Santa Fe Forest Coalition, Joey Smallwood M.S., environmental studies and GIS, Cristina Salvador M.S., plant ecologist at the Santa Fe Botanical Garden, Sarah Hyden, co-founder and director of The Forest Advocate, Adam Rissien M.S., environmental studies, ReWilding Manager at WildEarth Guardians, Dominick DellaSala, Ph.D., Chief Scientist at Wild Heritage. Photo: Jonathan Glass, Public Journal and co-founder of The Forest Advocate.
Recently, a group of scientists and conservation organization representatives came together for a series of field days to survey and discuss current ecological conditions on the east side of the Santa Fe National Forest. We, along with others not present on these field days, are planning on creating a conservation alternative to the Santa Fe Mountains Landscape Resiliency Project, an already-in-progress US Forest Service project primarily focused on aggressive tree cutting and prescribed fire across large sections of forest. The Forest Service’s stated purpose of the Santa Fe Mountains Project is to reduce fire risk and to restore forest “health” and “resilience,” but past cutting/burning projects have caused severe ecological damage, and the potential fire mitigation effects are questionable at best. The project is just beginning, and not many acres have been treated so far. It is still possible to alter the course of this project, and to design a holistic alternative that truly protects and restores this unique and beautiful forest that is in the process of climate transition.
The conservation alternative will also be a template for conservation projects in dry forests across the West. It will focus on the retention of water in the ecosystem through a variety of strategies, while greatly decreasing treatments that overly open up and dry out forested landscapes.
Over three days, we viewed relatively undisturbed forest, cutting and burning treatments, and forest burned from wildfire. Various types of disturbances have seriously impacted the Santa Fe Mountains ecosystem. In one area, cutting and burning treatments from 15 years ago have precipitated a dense growth of Gambel oak that is crowding out much of the pre-existing natural understory. Some of the remaining ponderosa pines in the Gambel oak thickets are turning brown, and some are dying. In the Santa Fe watershed, which over two decades ago was aggressively cut and subsequently burned twice, some hillsides appear largely barren. These areas have little understory, little biodiversity, and only similar-size seemingly low-vitality trees with not much but grasses in between.
We observed a burn area from a fire that occurred 22 years ago. We were unable to see any signs of conifer regeneration in the high severity burn area, although there are plans to investigate this further. There also appeared to be little conifer regeneration in a moderate severity section of the same fire.
Although we were already generally aware of conditions in the Santa Fe National Forest, this overview was eye-opening and alarming. Natural disturbances to an ecosystem are normal, and often beneficial, but many of these disturbances are human-caused, and the disturbed areas of our forest appear to be going onto a concerning trajectory. Wetter forests are generally still capable of substantial regeneration after disturbances, but in these dry forests, some areas appear to be type converting into shrublands after cutting and burning treatments, and possibly also after moderate and high severity fire. However, in some cases conifer regeneration in high severity burn areas can naturally take up to two decades or more in dry Southwestern forests. The influence of the combination of a rapidly changing climate and Forest Service treatments could be speeding up vegetation type shifts.
The forests of the Santa Fe Mountains appear to be in the beginning stages of advancing climate impacts. It’s a challenge to develop strategies to protect and restore forests in this situation. The agency approaches are not working – widespread cutting and overly frequent burning are creating landscapes that no longer even resemble forests, but are instead overly-open, dried-out, weed infested landscapes with little natural understory and widely spaced trees prone to blow over. Our conservation alternative will be a call to develop a new forest management paradigm for such dry forests as quickly as possible.
There may be some level of much lighter fuels reduction treatments that these forests can tolerate, but exactly what may work is presently unknown. Recent Forest Service cutting treatments have left somewhat greater residual tree densities than some of the treatments from over a decade ago, but it is unknown if that is enough to avoid serious adverse impacts, especially to forest soils and natural understories. After cutting trees, the trunks and branches are piled and burned, and pile burn scars remain for decades. Pile burning causes such high intensity heat that the natural understory does not tend to come back, and invasive weeds often appear. The Forest Service plans to cut approximately 18,000 acres during the 10-year Santa Fe Mountains Project, and if there are 20 burn piles per acre, they would be burning in the neighborhood of 360,000 piles. That would have a tremendous impact on already dried out soils.
Not nearly enough local research exists on the impacts of aggressive cutting and burning treatments on dry forest understories. It is not clear what the impacts of such treatments are on the mycorrhizal fungal networks that help to retain soil moisture. In the Santa Fe Mountains Project analysis, no references are provided for the composition of historical understories, nor is the composition of current relatively undisturbed local understories identified. Unfortunately, completely undisturbed understories rarely exist in the Santa Fe National Forest due to ongoing cattle grazing, which is permitted in most national forests across the West.
Due to the need for increased knowledge about what is happening to the ecology of this dry forest, and what conditions are optimal to preserve sections that still have adequate ecosystem function, preliminary research studies are in planning or in progress. Dr. Dominick DellaSala et al. have just completed an ecoregional conservation assessment for the southern Rockies, with a focus on the Santa Fe National Forest, which will be an underpinning of the Santa Fe Mountains conservation alternative. The authors found that the Santa Fe National Forest is lagging in terms of multiple conservation goals, and that forests far from communities are receiving treatments which neither provide community protection from wildfire nor appear to have a net ecological benefit. The assessment also projects climate change impacts on the region.
While Dr. DellaSala was in Santa Fe for the field days, he gave a very well-received talk about the ecoregional conservation assessment, at the invitation of the Santa Fe Botanical Garden. He described the impacts of overly aggressive treatments on the dry Santa Fe Mountains forest ecosystem, which he said is not forest restoration, but instead is forest degradation. He pointed out that there are no understory reference conditions, which are necessary for restoration.
This overview of Santa Fe National Forest conditions has coalesced my own views of what may be occurring in the SFNF, and what are the fundamental needs to begin to address regarding forest management in the area. My impressions are:
A moratorium on most cutting and burning treatments in the Santa Fe National Forest should be considered until the impacts of treatments during the rapid climate transition have been fully analyzed, and updated holistic forest management strategies are developed.
Monday, September 23
We went to the Black Canyon area, much of which was thinned in 2003 and later, to compare treated and untreated areas. The contrast is stark. The treated areas appear sparse and lacking in natural understory, while the untreated areas have a natural structure and robust understory.
After lunch, we went to Pacheco Canyon along the Tesuque Creek Trail to observe recently treated areas that are cut and piled. The Forest Service intends to use this treatment as a fire control line in the future. The Forest Service has indicated that such treatments are an example of the type of treatments they intend to carry out over 18,000 acres of the Santa Fe Mountains Project area. While the residual tree density of this treatment section is somewhat higher than in some past treatments, it is too early to see the types of understory impacts that are apparent in older thinning units.
Santa Fe watershed fuel break cut over two decades ago, and burned twice. There is little understory
regeneration. Photo: Cristina Salvador
Hillside in Black Canyon, cut in the early 2000’s and burned twice. Photo: Sarah Hyden
Old Growth in Pacheco Canyon. Photo: Sarah Hyden
Cut piles along Tesuque Creek Trail in Pacheco Canyon, with relatively undisturbed forest in the background. Photo: Sarah Hyden
Tuesday, September 24
After attending Dr. DellaSala’s talk at the Santa Fe Botanical Gardens, we headed to the forest above the community of Canada de los Alamos. We were met there by neighbors and two Forest Service specialists, the Soil and Watershed Program Manager, and a hydrologist.
We hiked through a riparian area that will be receiving restoration treatments according to the Santa Fe Mountains Project decision, and we also passed relatively undisturbed forest above the riparian area. We reached the boundary of the Santa Fe watershed that had been cut and burned over two decades ago, and once again the forest floor appeared barren of understory except for some grasses, with little biodiversity, and degraded. The tree density was similar here to recent thinning densities, so this area may be a harbinger of what those understories look like in the future. One person commented that the trees had “jail bar spacing.”
Riparian area above the Canada de los Alamos Forest, untreated. Photo: Sarah Hyden
Santa Fe Municipal Watershed north of the Canada de los Alamos Forest, cut in the early 2000’s and burned twice. Photo: Sarah Hyden
Wednesday, September 25
We drove up La Cueva canyon to view potential survey locations for an understory study and to observe the severe Gambel oak overgrowth from a cutting project mostly completed over 15 years ago. This area suggests what may occur to the ecosystems of recently cut areas.
At lunch, Teresa Seamster, the former chair of the Northern New Mexico Group of Sierra Club, joined us and filled us in on the preliminary results of a study in progress comparing soil moisture in treated and untreated areas, and comparing the levels of microbiotic bacteria and fungi in the soil samples. She also described a pilot use of biochar for better management of slash for a thinning project at Glorieta Camps.
In the afternoon we went to see the 2002 Dalton Fire burn area in Pecos. There was no visible conifer regeneration on a steep slope that burned at high severity, and very little in a flatter area that likely burned at moderate severity.
Untreated area in La Cueva Canyon. Photo: Sarah Hyden
Gambel oak overgrowth in La Cueva canyon, cut 15 years ago and subsequently burned. It is a fuel break, but it was cut to a similar density of other projects of that time. This photo is from October of 2023, and conditions have not appreciably changed. The Gambel oak overgrowth extends throughout most of the treated area. Photo: Sarah Hyden
2002 Dalton Fire high severity burn area, next to unburned forest. Little conifer regeneration can be seen. Photo: Sarah Hyden
Another view of the Dalton Fire, possibly moderate severity, flatter terrain, still little conifer regeneration. Photo: Sarah Hyden
Blue perimeter represents the Santa Fe Municipal Watershed boundary. Map composite by Jonathan Glass, Public Journal. Base map: ESRI National Geographic.
The Forest Advocate
Santa Fe, New Mexico