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Fire In Pennsylvania, Eastern U.S.: A Legal And Cultural History Program April 1
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Fire has always been a powerful force in Pennsylvania's forests, and with the recent work of Nature Conservancy scientists, prescribed fire is now an important land management tool used across the state to reduce the risk of wildfires, manage habitats and protect rare ecological communities.

           On April 1 starting at 1:00 the Penn State Environmental Law Review will present a special program on the legal and cultural history of forest fires in the eastern United States.  The program will be held in the  Greg Sutliff Auditorium of Lewis Katz Building and will be simulcast to Penn State Law facilities at 333 West South Street in Carlisle, Pa.
            "Our oak and southern pine species found in Pennsylvania and throughout the Appalachian Mountains evolved with periodic fires," said Todd Sampsell, director of conservation operations for The Nature Conservancy in Pennsylvania.
            "This natural disturbance is important for seed germination and stimulation of new growth. Additionally, rare disturbance-dependent natural communities like barrens and grasslands are found scattered throughout the Appalachians from Maine to Georgia and benefit from regular burning," he said. "As we continue to aggressively suppress all wildfires, we have seen a steady decline in forest health and a loss of these rare species and natural communities."
            To learn more about this important piece of Pennsylvania's history, conservation professionals, wildlife enthusiasts, forest managers, and government officials are invited to Fire in the Eastern United States, a symposium featuring Professor Stephen J. Pyne of Arizona State University who is one of the world's leading experts in fire history and ecology. 
            "We expect the symposium to inform policy makers and land managers—those responsible for forests and ecology—on a wide range of issues that impact fire policy east of the Mississippi. An example of that would be a discussion on the reintroduction of low intensity fires to the landscape in this part of the country," said Samuel Wiest '10, symposium editor of the Penn State Environmental Law Review.
            Professor Pyne will deliver the keynote address at 7:00 p.m. 
            A former member of the fire crew in Grand Canyon National Park, Pyne is a member of the Wildlife Advisory Group for the United Nations International Strategy for Disaster Reduction and the author of more than a dozen books on fire and its history.
            "Fire and humanity have become inseparable and indispensable. Together they have repeatedly remade the earth," he wrote in his 1995 work World Fire: The Culture of Fire on Earth.
            Other panelists include:
-- Todd Sampsell, director of conservation operations of The Nature Conservancy in Pennsylvania;
-- Lincoln Bramwell, historian with the U.S. Forest Service;
-- Fred Cheever, associate dean of academic affairs of the University of Denver Sturm College of Law, who writes about the Endangered Species Act, federal public land law and land conservation transactions;
-- Annecoos Wiersema, assistant professor of law at Ohio State University, who researches the development of national and international legal institutions that protect species and ecosystems;
-- Marc Abrams, professor of forest ecology and physiology at Penn State, who researches disturbance ecology and the impact of fire exclusion on mid-Atlantic forests;
-- Erica Smithwick, assistant professor of geography at Penn State, who studies ecosystem-wide impacts of forest fire and other disturbances and directs Landscape Ecology at Penn State.
            For more information, visit the event webpage or The Nature Conservancy-PA webpage.

 


3/22/2010

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