Decision
Support for Management Identification of Best Forest Treatments for Lifecycle
Carbon Offsets, Fire Reduction, and Avoiding Future Costs
This project will demonstrate application of the Landscape
Management System (LMS), a site- and landscape-specific tree-list-based
decision support tool for selecting forest management action priorities
in the West that best mitigate carbon emissions while reducing fire risk
and future costs. Carbon accounting will be upgraded by directly including
carbon offset effects of using forest residuals for biofuels, linking
the Fuel Characteristic Classification
System (FCCS) fuel loading mapped at landscape scales to tree information
used for stand-level treatment decisions to better identify fire reduction
priorities, and incorporating fire consumption models to improve estimates
of the carbon consumed (emitted) by wildfires. Utility of the tool will
be demonstrated and evaluated on Stewardship planning units in the Lakeview
Federal Stewardship Unit (Fremont-Winema
National Forests).
The tool will also be used to evaluate the impacts of treatment alternatives
across a range of representative forest types on public and private forest
lands. Predominant forest types, conditions, and management alternatives
will be identified in collaboration with U.S. Forest Service, Washington
Office Forest Management; and National Forest manager,s as well as demonstration-site
collaborators. The tool will also be used to evaluate the potential for
siting liquid biofuels plants to use biomass identified in treatment alternatives.
To extend the educational benefits to policy makers and other operators,
we will conduct a training session and prepare an interactive streaming
video characterizing the impacts of treatment alternatives across a range
of forest types on public and private forest lands for demonstration and
distance education. The tools and methods will be available by web access
or CD.
FERA's participation in this collaborative project will be to provide
advice and assistance on forest classification systems, fire modeling
and fire management (Morris Johnson) and develop the spatial application
of the fuels and consumption models (Don McKenzie).
This research project will begin in May 2008, and is expected to be complete
in September 2011.
Project Leads: Don
McKenzie and Morris Johnson
Collaborators: Kenneth Skog (Forest Products Laboratory);
Bruce Lippke, Jim McCarter, Elaine O'Neil, Larry Mason, Matthew McLaughlin
(University of Washington); Karen Shimamoto (Fremont and Winmena National
Forests); and Jim Walls (Lakeview County Resources Initiative)
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