Prescribed Burning Guidelines
in the Northern Great Plains
by
Kenneth F. Higgins
Arnold D. Kruse
James L. Piehl
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
The use of fire to manage grasslands for wildlife is a relatively new management option for resource managers in the Northern Great Plains (NGP). Nearly all of the burning during the past 20-25 years has been conducted without the aid of specific guidelines for the region. This state-of-the-art set of recommendations was compiled because of this void.
Records of 902 grassland fires (primarily on U.S. Fish and Wildlife lands), personal experiences, and synopses of other published fire research were used in developing the guidelines in this manual.
Fifty-two percent of the 902 fires were in native prairie grasslands with lesser amounts in tame and native grass plantings, wetlands, and woodlands.
Prescription grassland fires averaged 31 ha (77 acres) per burn. The personnel needed to safely conduct a grassland fire depended on the size of the burn, the kind of firebreaks, available equipment, and weather conditions. Costs and hours of effort to conduct fires were inversely related to burn area size. Cost ratios are extremely high for fires of less than 4 ha (10 acres). They are essentially the same for burns of 16 to 113 ha (40 to 280 acres).
The two primary reasons for burning grasslands are wildlife habitat improvement and native prairie restoration. Fire use steadily increased between 1965 and 1984, but the greatest increase occurred following workshop instruction in 1978.
These guidelines present a set of reasons, criteria, techniques, and examples of simple prescriptions which aid in the planning and execution of a safe and effective prescribed burning program for wildlife enhancement in grassland areas of the NGP.
This resource is based on the following source (Northern Prairie Publication 0732):
Higgins, Kenneth F., Arnold D. Kruse and James L. Piehl. 1989. Prescribed burning guidelines in the Northern Great Plains. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Cooperative Extension Service, South Dakota State University, U.S. Department of Agriculture EC 760. 36 pp.This resource should be cited as:
Higgins, Kenneth F., Arnold D. Kruse and James L. Piehl. 1989. Prescribed burning guidelines in the Northern Great Plains. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Cooperative Extension Service, South Dakota State University, U.S. Department of Agriculture EC 760. Jamestown, ND: Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center Online. http://www.npwrc.usgs.gov/resource/habitat/burning/index.htm (Version 16JUL97).
Contents
DISCLAIMER: Several older photographs used in this publication show burn crews without appropriate personal protective equipment. Current Department of Interior (DOI) requirements include Nomex shirts and pants, leather gloves and boots, hardhat, goggles, and fire shelter. Requirements may be found in the DOI Departmental Manual, chapter 910, DM 1; in the USFWS Service Refuge Manual, chapter 6RM 7.8c; in the USFWS Service Manual, part 241 FW 7.1; or in the USFWS Fire Management Preparedness and Planning Handbook, FWS 621 section 1.5.3.- Preface
- Introduction
- Area covered by guidelines
- Fire in historical perspective
- Present-day burning
- Is fire a choice?
- Fire in historical perspective
- Reasons for grassland burning
- Methods of spreading fire in grasslands
- Introduction
- Kinds of fires
- Basic patterns of burning grasslands
- Basic way to conduct a burn
- Kinds of fires
- Confining fire
- Introduction
- Bare ground or mineral soil firebreaks
- Fire containment lines
- Chemical retardants
- Foam retardants
- Wetlines
- Mowing and haying
- Flappers, backpacks, shovels, rakes
- Burned firebreaks
- Snowbanks
- Bare ground or mineral soil firebreaks
- Smoke management
- Fire setting and confinement equipment
- Weather conditions
- Fire setting and confinement equipment
- Important weather variables
- Temperature
- Relative humidity
- Wind
- Precipitation
- Sunshine
- Atmospheric stability
- Weather information sources
- Temperature
- State-of-the-art fire prescriptions
- Low-risk prescription
- Partial fuel consumption prescriptions
- Complete fuel consumption prescriptions
- High-risk prescriptions
- Climate conditions on recent fires
- General prescriptions
- Partial fuel consumption prescriptions
- Permit to burn
- Burn site constraints
- Wilderness fires
- Wilderness fires
- Training fire crew members
- Classroom and field instruction
- Fire management experience
- Fire management experience
- Safety
- Physical fitness standard
- Safety clothing
- Life-threatening situations
- Equipment purchase and repair
- Publicity
- Equipment check and testing
- Last-minute instructions
- Safety clothing
- Post-burn monitoring, mop-up, cleanup
- Perimeter monitoring
- Mop-up
- Site cleanup
- Mop-up
- Evaluation of fire effects on the environment
- Evaluation of a grassland burn
- Adequacy of plans and preparations
- Adequacy of the prescription on habitat manipulation
- Adequacy of plans and preparations
- Literature cited
- Appendix A -- An extensive fire plan
- Appendix B -- A brief fire plan for a low risk site
- Appendix C -- A brief fire plan for a site that is part of a larger comprehensive burn plan
- Appendix D -- A burn site evaluation form
- Appendix E -- Red flag situations
- Appendix F -- Fire situations that shout "watch out"
- Appendix G -- Examples of fuel and fire retardant mixtures
- Appendix H -- List of figures
- Appendix A -- An extensive fire plan
Downloading Instructions -- Instructions on downloading and extracting files from this site.
- burning.zip (1.8M) -- Prescribed Burning Guidelines in the Northern Great Plains Installation: Extract all files and open index.htm in a web browser.