Friday Flash - Fire Across the Grasslands: What Are We Managing For?
Fire is a key process in the grasslands and savannas that span the center of North America. "Fire Is Central" is an online discussion series designed to facilitate discussions about widely-relevant topics.
There are many common issues across the grasslands of the central United States, but sharing fire management knowledge is complicated due to numerous boundaries – notably state boundaries and administrative regions.
The sessions are hosted by the Tallgrass Prairie and Oak Savanna Fire Science Consortium and Great Plains Fire Science Exchange. They are facilitating these conversations to improve information flows and help connect people to colleagues and relevant experts outside of their usual circles.
Upcoming Discussion Date: Wednesday, January 11, 11 a.m. to 12:30 pm (Central Standard Time)
Fire Across the Grasslands – What Are We Managing For?
Grasslands in the Great Plains and Midwest are at constant risk from invasion by woody species. Conversion to deciduous woodlands and forests is already widespread in the Midwest and the southern Great Plains. This discussion focuses on the many ways that fire is essential to grasslands and the people who live there. Panel members will address:
the role of fire in resisting invasion by woody species;
managing reconstructed prairies;
promoting diverse plant communities and healthy wildlife populations; and
relevance to people from ranching communities to urban areas.
Panelists include:
Pauline Drobney - Prairie and Savanna Zone Biologist, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (retired)
Dwayne Elmore - Professor, Wildlife Extension Specialist, and Bollenbach Chair in Wildlife Biology in the Department of Natural Resource Ecology and Management at Oklahoma State University
Matthew Garrett - Natural Resource Manager, Johnson County Park & Recreation District, Shawnee Mission, Kansas
Doug Spencer - State Grazing Specialist - Kansas, Natural Resource Conservation Service
Amy Symstad - Research Ecologist and Chief of the Climate and Land-use Branch for the USGS Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center