Wildlife may thrive after fire - The Register-Guard,
Eugene, Oregon, USA
http://www.registerguard.com/news/2003/09/19/d3.cr.fire.0919.html
Wildlife may thrive after fire
The Associated Press, September 19, 2003
BEND - Deer, elk and bull trout will survive and
possibly thrive despite a complex of fires that
burned 91,000 acres in or around the areas where
these creatures live, wildlife experts say.
The Booth and Bear Butte fire complex in central
Oregon completely burned some areas, but it left
some spots only singed and avoided others
altogether. In some cases, the fires prepared the
forest for new growth.
On Thursday, fire officials reopened the northern
half of the Mount Jefferson Wilderness Area, citing
a drop in fire activity because of continued rain
and cooler temperatures.
The area north of Lizard Ridge and Hunts Creek Trail
No. 3440 also were opened Thursday. Three other
roads leading to wilderness trailheads - Whitewater
Road 2243, Woodpecker Road 2253 and Pamelia Road
2246 - have been open since Tuesday.
The fire, which at its peak drew more than 2,130
firefighters, has burned 90,800 acres.
Deer and elk, experts said, may benefit as may bull
trout, depending in part on water quality.
``It's not a total forest devastation out there,''
said Lauri Turner, a biologist with the Deschutes
National Forest.
Plants that deer and elk like, such as serviceberry
and bluebunch wheatgrass, will most likely grow in
burned areas. The fire may have expanded the area
some large animals can live in, said Steven George,
a biologist with the Oregon Department of Fish and
Wildlife.
Deer and elk herds sometimes move back into burned
areas, perhaps searching for minerals exposed by the
fire.
``They'll go in and start snooping around even when
it's still hot,'' George said.
George said he has heard no reports of deer or elk
killed by the fire.
Bull trout are making their annual spawning runs
this month and sometimes swim into the most
intensely burned areas.
``Apparently, the fire didn't inhibit their desire
to spawn,'' said Steve Marx, a biologist with the
Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife.
He said biologists are counting a higher than usual
number of bull trout spawning beds this year.
Streams contained more branches and downed trees,
which bull trout and their young like to hide under.
Still, erosion from slopes the fires left unstable
could damage some of the spawning beds.
``One of these risks is rain,'' Marx said.
Rain could wash silt and ash into streams and impede
spawning, he said.
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