Female inmate firefighter crew serving for non-violent offenses, ready for wildfire season


Female inmate firefighter crew serving for non-violent offenses, ready for wildfire season

24 June 2016

published by http://news3lv.com


USA– Cooler temperatures are helping firefighters get a handle on as many as 20 wildfires burning in the west.

So far, Nevada has been spared but crews know our luck will not last and at the Nevada Division of Forestry, based at the Jean Conservation Camp, its training day for members.

The Nevada Division of Forestry is a prison inmate crew whose members are all serving time for non-violent offenses.

“We’re essentially the state’s fire department,” said Aaron Boyce with the NV Division of Forestry.

Boyce is Camp Section Chief for the southern region, who says each of these firefighters is highly trained. And it just so happened they are all women.

“You know it’s actually a lot of fun at times. More than anything, though, I’ve learned so much by being out here. I’ve learned more things than I ever thought I would,” said inmate firefighter Lacey Ambro.

Ambro is beginning her third summer with the crew and says idle time is not good time.

“Idle time is not good time, so I try to do my time as productively as possible,” said Ambro.

“They do earn a little bit of money while they’re out on our crews and they do earn meritorious time, good time off their sentence, “said Boyce.

So far this year, the women have only responded to small brush fire near Mesquite but all around us, the west is burning.

At least 20 major wildfires have pulled crews from all over the region. Here in Jean, the women are on constant standby.

“I just want to do good,” said inmate firefighter Izzabella Anderson.

Anderson says her crew members are like family.

Nevada has a total of nine conservation camps spread throughout the state, but this is the only female crew.

Women who are not treated any differently out on the line and don’t expect to be.

“We have that stigma of were women, so we’re slower or weaker, but at the end of the day we go out there, get the job done, it’s efficient and to our standards,” said Lacey.

The crew also can also set up a fully functioning, mobile kitchen in just over an hour. Ready to feed hundreds of wildland firefighters.

For now, they wait, knowing fire season won’t skip Nevada for long.

“We get that ignition source, we’ll be busy down here,” said Boyce.New Research on the California spotted owl has found that severely burned forests that have not been post-fire salvage logged are used by the threatened raptor when foraging for their small mammal prey. Stand-replacing fires, also called crown fires or high-intensity fires, do not harm spotted owl foraging habitat.

“We looked at spotted owl foraging behavior at multiple spatial extents and we found that whatever scale we used, the owls foraged in severely burned unlogged forests in proportion to their availability. In other words, they foraged in burned forest with the same likelihood as in unburned forest.” said Monica Bond, lead author of the study.

Wildfires over the past two decades have affected southern California spotted owl habitat to a greater extent than elsewhere in the range of the subspecies. From 2003 to 2007, spotted owl territories in the region were especially affected by wildfire, with more than 40% of 168 breeding sites in the San Bernardino and San Jacinto mountains experiencing at least one fire.

“These frequent and hot fires make southern California forests a good indicator of what may happen in more northerly forests of California in a warming climate,” said Bond. “Luckily, forests burned by high-severity fire can still be considered suitable foraging habitat for California.”

Bond continued, “We also found these spotted owls strongly selected foraging sites close to streambeds, so we recommend implementing protective measures and management activities that conserve water and streamside forests.”

The study was published this week by scientists from the Wild Nature Institute and the Center for Biological Diversity in theJournal of Wildlife Management, a peer-reviewed scientific journal for professional wildlife biologists.

This is the latest in a series of scientific papers that have documented how resilient spotted owls are to high-severity fires, including so-called megafires. Spotted owl pairs have been shown to survive and continue to reproduce in breeding sites that experienced severe fire, even megafire, with success that is the same or higher than unburned sites. Spotted owls have also shown a significant preference for foraging in severely burned forest patches in the Sierra Nevada. However, post-fire salvage logging, also called forest restoration by the US Forest Service, causes site abandonment and reduces survival. Logging in an attempt to reduce the risk of fire, often called thinning or fuels reduction, also has adverse effects on spotted owls. The only studies that claimed forest fires hurt spotted owls have had logging in large portions of the study area.

“It’s high time we stopped managing our forests with the futile and unnecessary goal of stopping severe fires. All the science from the field says fuel buildup and insects don’t make forest fires worse. It is extreme weather like the Santa Anna winds in southern California that push fires to become very large, but we will never be able to stop these weather-driven blazes, so we should not risk our firefighter’s lives out in the wildlands. Instead, we should repurpose the billions of dollars we waste each year fighting wildfires on making structures fire-safe in our forest communities,” said Dr. Derek Lee, a co-author of the study. “Many native plants and animals thrive in the severely burned unlogged forest, and that response tells us that this kind of is natural and necessary to the ecology of the.”

Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2016-06-evidence-forest-threaten-owls.html#jCpNew Research on the California spotted owl has found that severely burned forests that have not been post-fire salvage logged are used by the threatened raptor when foraging for their small mammal prey. Stand-replacing fires, also called crown fires or high-intensity fires, do not harm spotted owl foraging habitat.

“We looked at spotted owl foraging behavior at multiple spatial extents and we found that whatever scale we used, the owls foraged in severely burned unlogged forests in proportion to their availability. In other words, they foraged in burned forest with the same likelihood as in unburned forest.” said Monica Bond, lead author of the study.

Wildfires over the past two decades have affected southern California spotted owl habitat to a greater extent than elsewhere in the range of the subspecies. From 2003 to 2007, spotted owl territories in the region were especially affected by wildfire, with more than 40% of 168 breeding sites in the San Bernardino and San Jacinto mountains experiencing at least one fire.

“These frequent and hot fires make southern California forests a good indicator of what may happen in more northerly forests of California in a warming climate,” said Bond. “Luckily, forests burned by high-severity fire can still be considered suitable foraging habitat for California.”

Bond continued, “We also found these spotted owls strongly selected foraging sites close to streambeds, so we recommend implementing protective measures and management activities that conserve water and streamside forests.”

The study was published this week by scientists from the Wild Nature Institute and the Center for Biological Diversity in theJournal of Wildlife Management, a peer-reviewed scientific journal for professional wildlife biologists.

This is the latest in a series of scientific papers that have documented how resilient spotted owls are to high-severity fires, including so-called megafires. Spotted owl pairs have been shown to survive and continue to reproduce in breeding sites that experienced severe fire, even megafire, with success that is the same or higher than unburned sites. Spotted owls have also shown a significant preference for foraging in severely burned forest patches in the Sierra Nevada. However, post-fire salvage logging, also called forest restoration by the US Forest Service, causes site abandonment and reduces survival. Logging in an attempt to reduce the risk of fire, often called thinning or fuels reduction, also has adverse effects on spotted owls. The only studies that claimed forest fires hurt spotted owls have had logging in large portions of the study area.

“It’s high time we stopped managing our forests with the futile and unnecessary goal of stopping severe fires. All the science from the field says fuel buildup and insects don’t make forest fires worse. It is extreme weather like the Santa Anna winds in southern California that push fires to become very large, but we will never be able to stop these weather-driven blazes, so we should not risk our firefighter’s lives out in the wildlands. Instead, we should repurpose the billions of dollars we waste each year fighting wildfires on making structures fire-safe in our forest communities,” said Dr. Derek Lee, a co-author of the study. “Many native plants and animals thrive in the severely burned unlogged forest, and that response tells us that this kind of is natural and necessary to the ecology of the.”

Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2016-06-evidence-forest-threaten-owls.html#jCp


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