From Deseret News archives:
Utah wildfires create chance to curb cheatgrass
Mike Kuhns, a professor in the department of wildland resources at the Logan university, adds that the biggest problem will be to find seeds for restoration projects.
So far this year, 724 wildfires have burned more than 670,000 acres in Utah, according to the National Interagency Fire Center in Boise. While this is a huge region, it's not as vast as the burned region in Nevada, nearly 882,000 acres, or Idaho, about 850,000 acres.
Nationally, wildfires have hit nearly 5 million acres, not counting prescribed burns. According to Brunson, figures may vary because some places burned lightly, others have unburned splotches in a sea of black, and in others "it charred everything."
However, without doubt huge sections of ground once covered with cheatgrass, juniper, sagebrush and other plants have lost vegetation.
"Cheatgrass is an annual that is fire-prone," Kuhns said, "very fire-prone." It completes its growth cycle in a year and is dead and dried, a reddish-purple hue, when competing plants are coming into full growth.
Cheatgrass is poor forage and when it dries it is fine tinder for wildfire. If cheatgrass catches on fire, the plants are already dead and the seeds remain dormant until the next growing season. But native perennials are still in mid-growth and can be wiped out before preparing the next generation.
Come spring, cheatgrass seeds germinate without competition.
"It's just hard for more desirable plants to get established in a cheatgrass environment," Kuhns said.
Brunson said he doesn't know how much of the burned area was cheatgrass, but the species is "very good at taking advantage of recently burned areas."
A good strategy, he added, is to quickly get other plants established wherever appropriate.
"If we do not plant, there will be plants in there," he said. "The plants that will grow without some sort of restoration activity are more likely to be weedy invaders. They are more likely to be undesirable non-native plants."
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