More info for the terms:
fuel,
fuel moisture,
prescribed fire,
wildfireGrazing considerations: The nutritional quality and digestibility of
new broomsedge bluestem growth are significantly increased following
fire. When burned in January or February in Georgia, protein content on
March 15 was 13 percent for plants on burned sites but only 5.5 percent
for plants on unburned sites. However, nutrient increases are
short-lived. By June 15, protein content of burned and unburned plants
was similar at 6.2 and 6.0 percent, respectively [
20]. Tender and
nutritious, this new growth is palatable to cattle and horses.
Following a July wildfire on Cumberland Islands National Seashore,
Georgia, horses heavily grazed broomsedge bluestem regrowth but avoided
nearby plants that had not burned [
3].
Prescribed burning considerations: Studying the fuel characteristics of
broomsedge bluestem, Fujioka and Fujii [
5] found the leaves and stalks
have a surface area-to-volume ratio 2.5 times as large as that in the
National Fire Danger Rating System model for perennial grass. After a
few years without fire, broomsedge bluestem stands contain much of this
dead, highly flammable material which carries fire well. It burns at
relatively high relative humidities (80-90%) and high fuel moisture
(20-25%) [
14]. On a 4-year-old loblolly pine clearcut in South
Carolina, an early February prescribed fire in cured broomsedge bluestem
carried fire at a rate of spread of 2.5 to 3.6 feet per minute (0.76-1.1
m/min). Burning took place only 4 days after a rain of 0.42 inch (1 cm)
and 7 days after a rain of 0.91 inch (2.3 cm). Flame heights were
generally 1 to 3 feet (0.3-0.9 m) and occasionally reached 4 to 5 feet
(1.2-1.5 m) [
38].