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Management

The Kaibab National Forest's fire managers and personnel take a proactive approach toward forest management, and unwanted wildfires will always approached with a full-suppression strategy.

However, many other types of fire are beneficial for the fire-adapted Ponderosa pine ecosystem of northern Arizona. By strategically managing low-intensity fire, such as prescribed fire and lightning-caused wildfire, our forest personnel work to keep the Kaibabas healthy as possible to benefit the local ecosystem and communities that surround it.

Prescribed Fire

Did you know fire can be good for people and the land? After many years of fire exclusion, an ecosystem that needs periodic fire becomes unhealthy. Trees are stressed by overcrowding; fire-dependent species disappear; and flammable fuels build up and become hazardous. The right fire at the right place at the right time:

  • Reduces hazardous fuels, protecting human communities from extreme fires;
  • Minimizes the spread of pest insects and disease;
  • Removes unwanted species that threaten species native to an ecosystem;
  • Provides forage for game;
  • Improves habitat for threatened and endangered species;
  • Recycles nutrients back to the soil; and
  • Promotes the growth of trees, wildflowers, and other plants;

The Forest Service manages prescribed fires and even some wildfires to benefit natural resources and reduce the risk of unwanted wildfires in the future. The agency also uses hand tools and machines to thin overgrown sites in preparation for the eventual return of fire.

Prescribed burns are conducted within a “prescription” that defines the fuel moisture levels, air temperatures, wind conditions, and relative humidity levels that are appropriate for each project. 

Managing Lightning-Caused Fires

Long before humans built homes and other valuable infrastructure here in northern Arizona, lightning played a role in fulfilling the natural fire cycle of the Ponderosa pine ecosystem. A “Managed Fire” is a response strategy to naturally-ignited wildfires; it does not prioritize full suppression and allows the wildfire to fulfill its natural role on the landscape, meeting objectives such as firefighter safety, resource benefit, and community protection.

This wildfire management strategy can be effective for reducing tree densities, landscape homogeneity, fuel load continuity, and future fire behavior, while also working to reintroduce fire to fire-prone ecosystems. 

While prescribed fires involve deliberately igniting fire to burn in a planned and controlled manner to achieve certain objectives, managed fire entails managing wildfire for an objective “other than full suppression.” Rather than suppress select wildfires as soon as possible, at the smallest possible size, practitioners manage them in a way that achieves ecologically beneficial outcomes and enhances community safety, creating buffers around them against possible future catastrophic wildfires. This is done through a confine-and-contain strategy, where a "big box" area is designated using pre-existing natural (such as meadows, rocky areas, or lakes) and human-made features (paved and unpaved roads, bulldozer-constructed control lines, and hand-cut control lines) paired with planned ignitions by firefighters on the ground or from the air using helicopters or drones) to help direct the fire by removing fire fuels from either the planning area perimeter, the interior, or both.

When an area has been treated with a prescribed burn or managed fire, it is far less challenging for firefighters to safely manage that area when a wildfire burns there later — making it significantly easier to protect life and property. Forest fire managers will proactively manage many (but not all) lightning-caused fires to benefit the health of the Kaibab. 

The science that is available now proves that a healthy Ponderosa forest is made of widely spaced, fire-resistant trees, where fire is frequent and necessary to create soil that accepts Ponderosa seeds and allows for germination.  Fire is a natural element of this ecosystem, and it will occur whether we like it or not, so using tools such as prescribed fires and managed fires allows us keep fire on the landscape that can protect us all in the future.

Full-Suppression Fire

If a new wildfire start is unwanted, our firefighters will approach the fire with a full-suppression strategy. This means fire managers will implement tactics to confine the fire to as small a perimeter as possible as quickly as possible, while prioritizing firefighter and public safety.

Fires are unwanted if they create a threat to public safety and infrastructure, happen during critical fire weather (such as drought, high temperatures and fast winds), are started in inopportune areas, and cannot safely be managed with available firefighting resources. Our fire managers always approach human-caused wildfires with a full-suppression strategy.

Last updated May 6th, 2025