BAER Specialists Complete Analysis Of Cerro Pelado Fire

2022-05-28 23:28:08 By : Mr. Wentao He

SANTA FE – Burned Area Emergency Response (BAER) specialists from the USDA Forest Service and the US Department of Interior assessment teams have completed data gathering and analysis for the Cerro Pelado Fire.

SANTA FE – Burned Area Emergency Response (BAER) specialists from the USDA Forest Service and the US Department of Interior assessment teams have completed data gathering and analysis for the Cerro Pelado Fire.

The soil burn severity (SBS) map analyzes approximately 45,605 acres of the burned area. The map and the data display soil burn severity (SBS) categories of unburned/very low, low, moderate and high.

Approximately 67 percent of the acres are either unburned/very low or low SBS, while 32 percent sustained a moderate SBS and only 1 percent identified as high SBS.

The Cerro Pelado SBS map also shows the burned acreage for land ownership:

The BAER assessment team used preliminary remote sensing data based on satellite imagery with field validated data collected over several days to produce the SBS map. Field-validated data was then collected from the Cerro Pelado burned area and analyzed. The BAER team and the US Geological Survey (USGS) both use the SBS map as an analysis tool to estimate post-fire erosion with subsequent sediment delivery, stream flows and debris flow probabilities. The USGS post-fire debris-flow hazards assessment report and maps will also be released by the BAER team.

The BAER assessment team coordinates with other local and federal agencies, including county and state officials, Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), National Weather Service (NWS), and USGS, to share information about burned watershed conditions and their predicted response during certain rain events.

It is important to note the SBS map product is an estimate of fire effects on soils and not direct effects to vegetation. SBS characterizes the soil surface and below-ground impact, whereas effects on vegetation are estimates of mortality based primarily on changes in vegetation canopy. The Rapid Assessment of Vegetation Condition after Wildfire (RAVG) program produces data describing post-fire vegetation conditions on National Forest System (NFS) lands. Changes in overhead and understory vegetation canopy are often used as initial indicators of overall burn severity, but do not necessarily coincide with SBS.

Changes in soil cover, water repellency, and soil physical/biological conditions guide the interpretations to determine the severity burn level of the soil. Water repellency can occur naturally in soil and may change as a function of fire. It is frequently discussed as a post-fire effect. Fire can increase the strength and thickness (or depth) of water repellent layers in soil, considerably affecting post-fire water runoff and possibly extending time for recovery of the burned area.

Soil burn severity indicators can be found within the Rocky Mountain Research Station’s General Technical Report 243 – Field Guide for Mapping Post-Fire Soil Burn Severity https://www.fs.fed.us/rm/pubs/rmrs_gtr243.pdf .

Descriptions of Soil burn severity indicators:

Generally, there is 100 percent tree mortality in high SBS, and tree recovery will take many years without planting. In high SBS, the exposed bare soil is very prone to post-fire impacts. The damaged soil is very easily detached with rain events causing excessive soil erosion, resulting in higher volumes of sediment delivery to adjacent creeks and rivers. There is increased likelihood for flooding and debris flows. These threats can individually or cumulatively increase the risk to human life and safety, property, infrastructure, and important critical natural and cultural resources.

Additional non-technical information about soil burn severity has been posted on InciWeb at: Post-Fire Effects – Understanding Soil Burn Severity – InciWeb the Incident Information System (nwcg.gov). The Cerro Pelado Fire soil burn severity map can be downloaded at the “Cerro Pelado Post-Fire BAER” InciWeb site (https://inciweb.nwcg.gov/incident/8118/ ) as a JPEG or PDF version under the “Maps” tab.

Cerro Pelado Post-Fire BAER Assessment information is available at: https://inciweb.nwcg.gov/incident/8118/

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