Two Sequoia Groves and a Wildfire

Left image: View from inside giant sequoia fire scar up toward the tops of live giant sequoias; right: same view after a wildfire killed al of the sequoias in this view, their green branches now brown with dead needles.
View from inside a giant sequoia fire scar cavity looking out at the tops of giant sequoias in the Sugar Bowl portion of the Redwood Mountain Grove. The left image showing the green living crowns of  giant sequoias was taken in June 2021; the right  image was taken of the same trees in June 2022, after all of them were killed by the 2021 KNP Complex Fire.

NPS Photo - Linda Mutch

 

In 2021, the 88,307-acre KNP Complex Fire burned portions of 16 giant sequoia groves, a total of 4,374 acres (1,770 hectares). Here we compare and contrast the fire's effects on two of our largest and well-known groves. We share why the Redwood Mountain Grove lost an estimated 974 to 1,574 large sequoias to the fire, and Giant Forest only had low to moderate fire effects along its west and northwest edges. We share how the following factors affected fire impacts in these groves:

  • Geography: Location, accessibility, and topography
  • History of prescribed burning
  • Fire behavior, or how the fire burned
  • What actions firefighters took as the fire approached
 

How did geography influence the different KNP Complex Fire effects in these groves?

Redwood Mountain Grove is located in Kings Canyon National Park and is at the northern end of the KNP Complex perimeter, while Giant Forest is at the eastern edge of the fire perimeter and occurs in Sequoia National Park (see map below).

Redwood Mountain Grove occurs in the bottom and on the slopes of Redwood Creek drainage and extends over Redwood Ridge to the east and into Eshom Creek drainage west of the park. The grove topography includes flatter areas along the canyon bottom, a ridgetop, and moderate to steep slopes that form Redwood Canyon. Fires tend to spread faster up a slope than downslope or in flat areas. Fire burning upslope preheats and dries fuels above it, making for more rapid burning and spread. Narrow and wide canyons, ridges, and saddles can dramatically affect how a fire burns. These features can change prevailing wind patterns, increasing wind speed, and intensifying fire behavior— such as rate of spread and the amount of heat the fire produces. All of these factors can make a prescribed fire more challenging to plan and manage and a wildfire more dangerous to fight.

Giant Forest is set on a rolling plateau between the Marble and Middle Forks of the Kaweah River. Portions of the grove extend down smaller creek drainages, with steeper topography, but the plateau-like terrain of much of the grove tends to favor more moderate fire spread that is easier to manage.

Access to these groves from roads and trails also played a role in the different prescribed fire history, and in the actions that were safe for firefighters to take during the KNP Complex Fire. Being closer to roads and more trails, Giant Forest has easier and safer access for firefighters to conduct prescribed burns and to take protective actions when severe wildfires approach the grove.

 
Map showing the KNP Complex Fire boundary and sequoia grove areas that burned in the fire.
The 2021 KNP Complex Fire boundary and sequoia groves that burned in the fire. The Redwood Mountain Grove is at the northern end of the fire perimeter, and Giant forest is along the central eastern edge. Note that only a small portion of Giant Forest was in the fire perimeter, compared to all of Redwood Mountain Grove.

NPS Photo - Joshua Flickinger

 
Firefighter wearing hardhat and the fire resistant Nomex yellow shirt and green pants uses a drip torch to ignite shrubs and other plants during a prescribed burn.
A firefighter uses a drip torch to ignite shrubs and grasses during the 2022 Hazelwood-Tharps prescribed burn in Giant Forest.

NPS Photo - Tony Caprio

History of Prescribed Burning

While the Redwood Mountain Grove had an earlier start to prescribed burning, beginning with small burns conducted for fire effects research projects in the mid-1960s, Giant Forest has since had many more prescribed burns over a larger area. Between 1980 and 2022, park staff conducted 62 prescribed burns in Giant Forest. By contrast, between 1964 and 2016, a total of 18 prescribed burns were done in Redwood Mountain, and the 1964 and 1965 burns were small and centered around areas where scientists did research projects on fire effects and giant sequoia seedling establishment. The prescribed burns in Giant Forest are distributed throughout most of the grove area. Prescribed burns in Redwood Mountain are primarily in the northern portion of the grove, which is more accessible, and therefore, safer for fire staff to work in, and less complex to prepare and burn.

 
Large column of grey smoke over the tops of conifers as fire burns upslope.
The KNP Complex Fire burns upslope toward the Generals Highway from Redwood Mountain Grove, October 4, 2021, 9 AM.

NPS Photo - Joe Suarez

How did the fire burn in the two groves?

Redwood Mountain, Kings Canyon National Park

On October 3 and 4, 2021, two fronts of the KNP Complex Fire burned into Redwood Mountain and Redwood Canyon. Fire burning to the west of Redwood Mountain made a run across the ridge into the main canyon and merged with another portion of the fire burning up-canyon from north of the Big Springs Grove. The resulting fire burned the southern end of Redwood Mountain Ridge and lower portions of the grove in Redwood Canyon as a high severity fire torching the crowns of giant sequoias. This fire then burned east, to the East Fork of Redwood Creek and onto the Big Baldy Ridge. It then burned west of Redwood Mountain Ridge into Eshom Creek drainage, where late in the day it made a high severity crown fire run out of the grove and across Generals Highway onto Park Ridge.

 
Two people waring hardhats walk upslope in a mixed conifer-giant sequoia forest. Trees and ground have some charring from fire, but fire effects are mild and trees all still green with live branches.
Two people hike along the northern portion of Redwood Mountain Ridge, where fire effects from the KNP Complex Fire were mild and generally beneficial to the forest. This is an area that had recent prescribed burning.

NPS Photo - Daniel Jeffcoach

The fire also burned north through Redwood Canyon until reaching the areas burned out by fire crews at the upper part of the grove. Recent prescribed burns conducted in 2004, 2006, 2009, 2011, 2012, and 2016 moderated the fire’s severity in this area because ground fuels and small trees and undergrowth had already been reduced. Some areas had been burned in prescribed fires 2-3 times. The difference in fire effects between the north portion of the grove, which had been treated with prescribed burning in fairly recent history, and south portions of the grove, which lacked recent fire history, is stark. In the south, the groups of charred, dead sequoias are heartwrenching to see. In the north, the fire killed some small trees and shrubs, but sequoias and most other trees still stand – a green haven of forest.

 
Left image: very large sequoia tree with charred bark but mostly live branches; right: Large sequoia tree with charred trunk and just a few, mostly dead branches remaining.
Photos taken July 26, 2022.
Left image: Hart Tree. While its trunk is charred, this tree's branches are mostly green and it is in relatively good shape. Right image: Roosevelt Tree. This tree's existing fire scarring made it more vulnerable, and its crown collapsed.

NPS Photo - Tony Caprio

Impacts to Named Trees and Cultural Resources

The fire destroyed the National Park Service's historic Redwood Saddle Cabin, just off the road near the Redwood Mountain Grove trailhead. Along the Hart Tree Trail, the fire burned Barton’s Cabin Log and much of the Tunnel Log (note: not to be confused with the more famous Tunnel Log in Giant Forest). The Hart Tree had moderate amounts of crown scorching, but the tree is overall in good shape with numerous green branches remaining. The Roosevelt Tree, just upslope from the Hart Tree, had an old, large fire scar that the fire burned into, burning out the center of the tree and causing the tree’s crown to collapse. Several small, green branches remained as of late July 2022, but the probability of this tree surviving is low.

 
Fire burns through ground fuels (sticks, log and small trees), looming large granite rock (Moro Rock) in background.
The KNP Complex Fire burns at low intensity in sticks, logs, and small trees at the southwest edge of Giant Forest, September 28, 2021. Moro Rock can be seen in the background.

NPS Photo

Giant Forest, Sequoia National Park

On September 17, 2021, after the Paradise and Colony fires merged, the main front of the KNP Complex Fire made an upslope run into western areas of Giant Forest and burned into lower Deer Creek. On September 18, the fire pushed further east, burning across the Generals Highway and the Crescent Meadow Road on the grove’s west side, and into Sherman Creek on the northwest side. The fire’s growth was stopped below the General Sherman Tree by a 2019 prescribed burn unit on the west side of the Generals Highway, illustrating the effectiveness of reduced fuels (e.g., logs, sticks, young trees) in slowing wildfire growth.

Impacts to Named Trees and Cultural Resources

By October 3rd, the fire had grown around the south side of the grove and burned the historic restroom building near Moro Rock. No impacts to sequoias of special interest (such as named trees) occurred, except for some basal charring of two of the Four Guardsmen along the Generals Highway.

 
During the cooler, more humid nighttime hours, firefighters use drip torches to burn fuels between road and the fire.
Firefighters ignite ground fuels between the road and the KNP Complex Fire, reducing fuels available to burn when the fire reaches this area.

Photo courtesy of Dave Mills

What actions did firefighters take prior to the fire’s approach?

Redwood Mountain, Kings Canyon National Park

In September, firefighters cleared fuels away from the bases of 45 large sequoias in in the more accessible northern portion of this grove. On October 1-3, 2021, firefighters conducted backfiring operations at night along the Generals Highway in areas upslope of the grove. Backfiring is a firefighting tactic where firefighters intentionally set fire to fuels within a control line, such as a road, to contain a rapidly-spreading fire. This reduces the chance of fire jumping over the fireline (or road in this case) and makes it safer for firefighters to put out spot fires that may result from embers blowing upslope or across the road. Backfiring operations continued along Big Baldy Trail and west from the highway overlook to Redwood Ridge. Early on October 4th, firefighters burned along the east flank of Redwood Ridge, south of Redwood Saddle parking area.

 
Firefighters stand along a trail or fireline monitoring a burnout operation in a mixed-conifer giant sequoia forest.
Firefighters monitor a burning operation in Giant Forest, conducted to remove ground fuels and reduce the spread rate and intensity of the wildfire if it reaches this area.

NPS Photo - Thomas Chavez

Giant Forest, Sequoia National Park

To prevent spread of high-intensity fire into Giant Forest, firefighters conducted burning operations starting on September 19, 2021, and continuing subsequent days. Using hand ignitions with drip torches, firefighters reduced woody material and fine fuels like pine needles and younger trees that can carry fire up into the canopy of larger trees. This fuel removal helps to reduce the intensity of the approaching wildfire and slow its spread. These occurred near Crescent Meadow Road, upper Sherman Creek, Pinewood area, and Sunset Rock, to protect the area from a fire run upslope out of the Middle Fork where the fire was spreading upcanyon. In case the fire made an uphill run, additional burning operations continued into late October within the grove, south of Crescent Meadow Road and the High Sierra Trail.

 

How many acres burned at different severities?

Satellite imagery is used to estimate the fire's severity, or how the fire altered or disrupted the ecosystem. The change between pre-fire and post-fire vegetation is used to estimate the severity of the fire. The table below provides estimates of the areas (acres and percent) of Giant Forest and Redwood Mountain Grove that were burned at different severities and how much area was entirely outside the fire perimeter. Areas detected as "unchanged" had some underburn, but ground surveys are needed to determine its extent and effects as they are not as observable by satellite.

As the table indicates, only 24 percent of Giant Forest was within the fire perimeter, compared with 100 percent of Redwood Mountain Grove. Only 1.2 percent of Giant Forest burned at moderate or high severity, but 40 percent of Redwood Mountain sustained moderate to high severity fire, which killed large numbers of giant sequoias.

 
Acres and percent of area burned by severity class (including acres and percent outside of fire perimeter) by sequoia grove. Severity classes are based on Rapid Assessment of Vegetation Condition after Wildfire (RAVG) analysis comparing pre-fire and immediate post-fire changes in vegetation. Note that Redwood Mountain Grove includes lands managed by the National Park Service, the US Forest Service, and University of California, Berkeley. Some rows don't sum exactly to 100 percent because of rounding to whole numbers.
Grove Outside Fire Perimeter Unchanged Low Severiy Moderate Severity High Severity Total Burned Area
Giant Forest 1609 (76%) 284.8 (14%) 183.3 (8%) 24.0
(1%)
3.7 (0.2%) 495.8 (24%)
Redwood Mtn 0 (0%) 631.7 (24%) 957.7 (36%) 519.7
(19%)
560.6 (21%) 2669.7 (100%)

 
Inch-high giant sequoia seedlings grow near a cone.
June 2022 Severely burned sequoia groves have too few live trees to provide seeds for young sequoias to establish. These sequoia seedlings sprouted in Redwood Mountain after the fire, but large areas have no or very few seedlings. Many seedlings must establish for a few to survive.

NPS Photo

Caring for Sequoia Groves

Park managers and other entities that manage giant sequoia groves are learning more about the health of sequoia groves and planning how best to restore and protect them from future major wildfires. Here are some of the current priorities:

  • Working with scientists to learn more about how sequoias are responding to climate change (hotter droughts and more severe wildfires)
  • Planning and conducting prescribed burns
  • Planning and implementing selective thinning and pile burning
  • Re-planting some parts of severely burned sequoia groves
  • Sharing knowledge and findings about changes in groves related to fire and warming climate
  • Working across boundaries with other agencies, private organizations, and tribal partners who also manage giant sequoia groves

 

Fire and Climate Change

  • Several wildland firefighters hike single file along a fire line, carrying equipment.
    KNP Complex Fire

    Learn about the 2021 KNP Complex Fire and its management, including firefighting tactics, a timeline, and photos.

  • Firefighter standing in a field of dry, brown grass that is on fire with trees in the background.
    Fuels Management and Prescribed Fire

    Information on the parks' prescribed fire program

  • A sliver of cut wood showing tree rings. Some tree rings are labeled with years and arrows
    Fire Ecology

    Learn about the park's research about the interactions between fire and living organisms and their environment.

  • Fire burns in ground vegetation below towering giant sequoia trees.
    Giant Sequoias and Fire

    Learn more about the role fire plays in giant sequoia groves, and the impacts recent higher severity fires have had on sequoia trees..

  • View looking upward at the brown foliage of a dead giant sequoia.
    Climate and Giant Sequoias

    Climate plays an important role in giant sequoia groves, and scientists are studying drought effects on sequoia health.

  • Stand of giant sequoias killed in a 2021 wildfire.
    Climate Change

    Climate change contributes to increased severity of wildfires that have killed many conifers, including giant sequoias.

 

Learn more about threats to giant sequoias.

 
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    Last updated: January 28, 2024

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