SOUTHWESTERN-NEWS-RELEASE: Kaibab National Forest

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Please contact me if you have any questions regarding this release.

 

Thank you!

 

Respectfully,

David Hercher/Public Affairs Specialist

USDA – Forest Service,

Kaibab National Forest, R3, NKRD

Fredonia, AZ 86022

Office: 928-643-8110

Mobile: 928-522-4660

Fax: 928-643-8105

Email: davidjhercher@xxxxxxxxx

“We Do Not Inherit the Earth from Our Ancestors; We Borrow It from Our Children” -Author Unknown

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North Zone Fire Managers Plan For Moquitch Rx Burn   

 

FREDONIA, Ariz. – As more prescribed fires generally equate to fewer extreme wildfires, North Zone fire managers continue to track the ever-changing weather conditions for opportunities to implement the prescribed fire burn plan for the North Kaibab Ranger District. Currently, fire managers are assessing weather conditions in the forest with plans to implement the Moquitch 2 Rx burn as early as Monday, October 13, 2014.

 

The Moquitch 2 project is approximately 5 miles west of AZ 67 and is 2,486 acres in size. The burn unit is geographically located east of Forest Service Road (FSR) 282, north of FSR 212 and west of FSR 640. This burn unit is mainly comprised of ponderosa pine with scattered clumps of aspen. 

 

Earlier this month, fire managers were able to successfully implement prescribed fire treatment in the Jacob Ryan South Groupsite Unit, which was approximately 471 acres in size, with minimal smoke impacts to the area.

 

In addition to reducing hazardous fuels and protecting forest visitors and the local community, prescribed fire also helps minimize the spread of insects and disease, provides forage for game, improves wildlife habitat, and recycles nutrients back into the soil to promote regeneration of trees and other plant species.

 

During the planning stages of any prescribed fire, fire managers and other forest specialists write burn plans, which consider temperature, humidity, wind, moisture of the vegetation, and conditions for the dispersal of smoke. Prescribed fire specialists compare conditions on the ground to those outlined in burn plans before deciding whether to burn on a given day. They want to maximize the ideal fall weather conditions to increase landscape resilience to wildfire, insects and disease, return fire to a fire-adapted ecosystem, improve forest health and sustainability and enhance public safety.

 

The prescribed fire treatments are only implemented when environmental conditions are ideal to assuring firefighter and visitor safety and only upon approval of the Arizona Department of Environmental Quality.

 

Visitors are cautioned that they may see fire personnel and fire vehicles in the vicinity when any prescribed fire is being implemented, and are reminded to drive slowly, turn on headlights, and avoid stopping in areas where fire personnel are working.

 

For more information on smoke and air quality, please visit www.azdeq.gov or wildlandfire.az.gov.

 

-USFS-





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Attachment: 1650-1_d3_Moquitch2RxBurn_2014_1012.pdf
Description: 1650-1_d3_Moquitch2RxBurn_2014_1012.pdf


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