Traditional Fire Knowledge in Spain
When you haven't done something for a while it's often best not to rush straight back in at the intensity you were at before. So here's a nice easy blog to get me going again (not that I was blogging intensely before!).
I didn't blog about it at the time (unsurprisingly), but back in late June 2013 I went to visit a colleague of mine in Madrid, Dr Francisco Seijo. Francisco and I met back at something I did blog about, the 2009 US-IALE conference in Snowbird. Since then we've been discussing how we can use the idea of coupled-human and natural systems to investigate Mediterranean landscapes.
After a brief field visit by me, an interview campaign by Francisco, collection of secondary data from other sources (aerial photography and official fire statistics) and some desk analysis, we recently published our first paper on the work. Entitled Forgetting fire: Traditional fire knowledge in two chestnut forest ecosystems of the Iberian Peninsula and its implications for European fire management policy, and published in the journal Land Use Policy, the article presents the results of our mixed-methods and interdisciplinary approach. Building on Francisco's previous examination of 'pre-industrial anthropogenic fire regimes' we to to investigate differences between the fire regimes and management approaches of chestnut forest ecosystems in two municipalities in central Spain. In the paper we also discuss ideas of Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK), the related idea of Traditional Fire Knowledge (TFK), and discuss them in light of contemporary fire management approaches in Europe.
The full abstract is below with links to the paper. I'll stop here now as this rate of blogging it making me quite dizzy (but hopefully I'll be back for more soon).
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Seijo, Francisco, James DA Millington, Robert Gray, Verónica Sanz, Jorge Lozano, Francisco García-Serrano, Gabriel Sangüesa-Barreda, and Jesús Julio Camarero (2015) Forgetting fire: Traditional fire knowledge in two chestnut forest ecosystems of the Iberian Peninsula and its implications for European fire management policy. Land Use Policy 47 130-144. doi: 10.1016/j.landusepol.2015.03.006
[Online] [Pre-print]
Abstract
I didn't blog about it at the time (unsurprisingly), but back in late June 2013 I went to visit a colleague of mine in Madrid, Dr Francisco Seijo. Francisco and I met back at something I did blog about, the 2009 US-IALE conference in Snowbird. Since then we've been discussing how we can use the idea of coupled-human and natural systems to investigate Mediterranean landscapes.
Example of Traditional Fire Knowledge. The ‘pile-burning’ technique involves raking, piling and igniting leaves. This contrasts with ‘a manta’ broadcast burning in which leaves and ground litter are burned across larger areas. Photos by the authors of the paper.
After a brief field visit by me, an interview campaign by Francisco, collection of secondary data from other sources (aerial photography and official fire statistics) and some desk analysis, we recently published our first paper on the work. Entitled Forgetting fire: Traditional fire knowledge in two chestnut forest ecosystems of the Iberian Peninsula and its implications for European fire management policy, and published in the journal Land Use Policy, the article presents the results of our mixed-methods and interdisciplinary approach. Building on Francisco's previous examination of 'pre-industrial anthropogenic fire regimes' we to to investigate differences between the fire regimes and management approaches of chestnut forest ecosystems in two municipalities in central Spain. In the paper we also discuss ideas of Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK), the related idea of Traditional Fire Knowledge (TFK), and discuss them in light of contemporary fire management approaches in Europe.
The full abstract is below with links to the paper. I'll stop here now as this rate of blogging it making me quite dizzy (but hopefully I'll be back for more soon).
----
Seijo, Francisco, James DA Millington, Robert Gray, Verónica Sanz, Jorge Lozano, Francisco García-Serrano, Gabriel Sangüesa-Barreda, and Jesús Julio Camarero (2015) Forgetting fire: Traditional fire knowledge in two chestnut forest ecosystems of the Iberian Peninsula and its implications for European fire management policy. Land Use Policy 47 130-144. doi: 10.1016/j.landusepol.2015.03.006
[Online] [Pre-print]
Abstract
Human beings
have used fire as an ecosystem management tool for thousands of years. In the
context of the scientific and policy debate surrounding potential climate
change adaptation and mitigation strategies, the importance of the impact of
relatively recent state fire exclusion policies on fire regimes has been
debated. To provide empirical evidence to this ongoing debate we examine the
impacts of state fire exclusion policies in the chestnut forest ecosystems of
two geographically neighbouring municipalities in central Spain, Casillas and
Rozas de Puerto Real. Extending the concept of ‘Traditional Ecological
Knowledge’ to include the use of fire as a management tool as ‘Traditional Fire
Knowledge’ (TFK), we take a mixed-methods and interdisciplinary approach to
argue that currently observed differences between the municipalities are useful
for considering the characteristics of “pre-industrial anthropogenic fire
regimes” and their impact on chestnut forest ecosystems. We do this by
examining how responses from interviews and questionnaire surveys of local
inhabitants about TFK in the past and present correspond to the current
biophysical landscape state and recent fire activity (based on data from
dendrochronological analysis, aerial photography and official fire statistics).
We then discuss the broader implications of TFK decline for future fire
management policies across Europe particularly in light of the published
results of the EU sponsored FIRE PARADOX research project. In locations where
TFK-based “pre-industrial anthropogenic fire regimes” still exist, ecosystem
management strategies for adaptation and mitigation to climate change could be
conceivably implemented at a minimal economic and political cost to the state
by local communities that have both the TFK and the adequate social, economic
and cultural incentives to use it.
Key words
Fire exclusion policies; traditional ecological knowledge; traditional
fire knowledge; Chestnut forest ecosystems; FIRE PARADOX
Labels: Academic, Ecological, Forests, Landscapes, Social, Wildfire
This work by James D.A. Millington is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.
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