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You're watching Inside Yellowstone.
Fire is not only one of the most powerful
processes in play on the Yellowstone Plateau,
but it is one of the most important. Everywhere
you look, you see evidence of past wildfires.
In 1972 Yellowstone adopted a natural burn policy.
Fires that start naturally, through lightning,
can be allowed to burn. All non-prescribed
human caused fire would still be fought.
Today, wildfire experts monitor every fire.
They take into account where the fire started,
what the weather has been like, and what the
forecast is for the near future. Is the fire
close to a historical structure or a gateway
community? Then and only then do they make a
decision regarding an individual fire.
In 1988, 793,880 acres or 1/3 of Yellowstone
was involved in fire. The park experienced over
fifty wildfires. Researchers believe these
large wildfires occur every 200 years or so.
Yellowstone averages 22 wildfires a year.
In most years, fires that are allowed to burn put
themselves out after burning less than one acre.
One of the most important aspects of fire in
Yellowstone is the relationship fire has with
the lodgepole pine tree. Eight out of every ten
trees in the park are lodgepoles. Yellowstone’s
recent volcanic past, geologically speaking, left
the plateau with a thin layer of silica rich topsoil.
Since lodgepole pines have relatively shallow root
systems they dominate here. This special pine tree
has developed two different pine cones; one that
opens normally and one, a serotinous or heat loving
cone, that opens only after exposure to heat.
A fire comes along and the lodgepole reseeds itself.
There was not one tree planted by humans after
the 1988 fires. In 1989, some areas had over
1 million logdepole seedlings per acre.
On your next visit to Yellowstone, walk into a
young lodgepole pine stand and experience
a forest that was born with fire.