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Fire Ecology Across Boundaries: Connecting Science and Management

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The Association for Fire Ecology (AFE) and Pau Costa Foundation (PCF) are partnering with Regione Toscana and University of Florence to host a conference in Europe for diverse stakeholders involved in wildfire management. This collaboration will provide a forum for anyone interested in wildland fire issues to learn from one another, share information, and create new relationships.

POSTPONED - 5th Central Oregon Fire Science Symposium

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In light of the recent recommendations and direction by both Governor Brown (OR) and Governor Inslee (WA), as well as travel restrictions set by our agency partners, we have decided to postpone the Central Oregon Fire Science Symposium until later in 2020 or even early 2021.  We want to be mindful of the health and safety of all symposium participants.

Oregon Prescribed Fire Council Meeting (now by ZOOM)

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Update:

Due to the uncertainties about the spread and impact of the COVID-19 virus and growing number of institutions with travel restrictions, we have decided to cancel the in-person meeting of the Oregon Prescribed Fire Council meeting next week. We will be refunding all registrations.

Sharing Science and Lessons Learned: COVID-19 and Wildfire

As COVID-19 cases and wildland fire activity increase across the country, wildland fire personnel are looking for ways to quickly identify cases and prevent the spread of the disease on the fireline. The Southwest Fire Consortium will be hosting a webinar sharing information about the current state of the science and lessons learned from the 2020 wildfire season. Join us as Dr.

Resilience in national forest planning

Recent policies including the Cohesive Strategy and the 2012 NFMA planning rule emphasize restoration of landscape resilience as a way forward for living with fire on national forestlands. But what does resilience mean, what does it take to plan for resilient landscapes, and what other factors complicate the achievement of resilient landscape outcomes?

Assessing the Work of Wildfires and Identifying Post-fire Management Needs

 Landscapes of the Inland West are deeply affected by 100+ years of fire exclusion, the loss of indigenous burning, and expansion and densification of many forests. Today, anthropogenic climate change and wildfires are modifying the structure and composition of forests across the West at rates that far exceed adaptation and restorative treatments.