Last updated: December 1, 2022
Article
Reducing fire risk in Brooks Camp - Katmai National Park and Preserve
Jennifer Barnes, NPS
In 2021, staff with Katmai and the Alaska regional office developed a mechanical fuels treatment plan around the infrastructure and trails in Brooks Camp. The plan called for thinning and limbing trees and removing downed trees within a 50-foot buffer of the structures and trails/roads. Approximately 65 acres will be treated over five years. This project will help to reduce the fire potential in Brooks Camp.

Jennifer Barnes, NPS

Keaton Shepherd, BLM-AFS
Park managers were also concerned about the potential increase in shrubs or grass after thinning, which could obscure the detection of bears when trying to minimize bear/human interactions. To assess the vegetation changes before and after treatment, regional fire ecologists established 27 pre-treatment monitoring plots in June 2022. The goals are to assess treatment progress, if fire risk was reduced, and assess shifts in vegetation. Regular monitoring will continue over the next decade.

Keaton Shepherd, BLM-AFS