Skip to Content
Main Menu
Search
Utah's Watershed Restoration Initiative
Utah's Watershed Restoration Initiative
Projects
Maps
About Us
Register
Login
Search
Saving...
Thank you for requesting access to WRI.
An administrator will contact you with further details.
Forsyth Fire Rehabilitation
Region: Southern
ID: 7698
Project Status: Current
Map This Project
Export Project Data
Project Details
*
Need for Project
The Forsyth Fire started on June 19 and burned for about 6 weeks and consumed about 15,662 acres. The fire burned around and into the community of Pine Valley and destroyed 13 homes and caused damage to the Pine Valley Recreation Area. Approximately 60% of the headwaters of the Santa Clara River burned. The Dixie National Forest requested federal funding to seed and mulch hillslopes but were denied. We feel that this work is important to minimize erosion, minimize invasive species spread, facilitate restoration of the burned area, improve wildlife habitat, minimize damage to downstream water users and wildlife, and minimize impacts to downstream communities and facilities.
Provide evidence about the nature of the problem and the need to address it. Identify the significance of the problem using a variety of data sources. For example, if a habitat restoration project is being proposed to benefit greater sage-grouse, describe the existing plant community characteristics that limit habitat value for greater sage-grouse and identify the changes needed for habitat improvement.
*
Objectives
The objectives for this project are to facilitate watershed and soil stabilization, reestablish desired grass/forb vegetation to portions of the burned area, reduce the amount of undesirable invasive forb/grass spread, and rehabilitate rangelands/wildlife habitat.
Provide an overall goal for the project and then provide clear, specific and measurable objectives (outcomes) to be accomplished by the proposed actions. If possible, tie to one or more of the public benefits UWRI is providing.
*
Project Location/Timing Justification (Why Here? Why Now?)
The Forsyth fire, If left untreated the burned area may be highly encroached with undesired annual grasses such as cheat grass. This area is highly used by mule deer in the spring for fawning and summer for cover and foraging. Risk to agricultural and municipal water supplies is High to Very High based on a Likely to Very Likely probability of damage or loss, and Moderate magnitude of consequences. Impacts of recent flooding and debris flows have already impacted the Pine Valley Rec area and the town of Pine Valley
LOCATION: Justify the proposed location of this project over other areas, include publicly scrutinized planning/recovery documents that list this area as a priority, remote sensing modeling that show this area is a good candidate for restoration, wildlife migration information and other data that help justify this project's location.
TIMING: Justify why this project should be implemented at this time. For example, Is the project area at risk of crossing an ecological or other threshold wherein future restoration would become more difficult, cost prohibitive, or even impossible.
*
Relation to Management Plans
1) Utah Division of Wildlife Resources Statewide Management Plan for Mule deer. Section IV Statewide management goals and objectives. This plan will address Habitat Objective 2: Improve the quality and quantity of vegetation for mule deer on a minimum of 500,000 acres of crucial range. Strategy C. Initiate broad scale vegetative treatment projects to improve mule deer habitat with emphasis on drought or fire damaged sagebrush winter ranges, ranges that are being taken over by invasive annual grass species, and ranges being diminished by encroachment of conifers into sagebrush or aspen habitats. Burned area is in crucial summer and winter range. Seeding the project area will help mitigate potential annual grass species encroachment. 2) Pine Valley Deer Herd Management Plan, Deer Herd Unit # 30 (2020) -Habitat management objectives: Maintain and/or enhance forage production through direct range improvements throughout the unit on winter and summer range to achieve population management objectives. Seeding burned area will help maintain forage production in summer and winter range to maintain population objectives. 3) North American Mule Deer Conservation Plan (Mule Deer Working Group 2004). A) Mule deer habitat Objectives and Strategies-Develop and implement habitat treatment protocols that reduce the impacts of cheatgrass or other invasive plants. B) Manage mule deer habitat in a fashion to control type conversions (i. e., conversion of rangeland to croplands, and shrublands to monotypic pinyon-juniper stands) (Pg. 7). Seeding burned area will help reduce the impacts of cheatgrass in this area by establishing desired grasses and forbs. 4) National Fire Plan (NFP) - Primary Goals: 1) Improve fire prevention and suppression; 2) Restore fire adapted ecosystem. 5) Accompanying (NFP) 10 year Comprehensive Strategy - Guiding Principles: 3) Prevent invasive species and restore watershed function and biological communities through short-term stabilization and long-term rehabilitation; 4) Restore healthy, diverse, and resilient ecological system to minimize uncharacteristically severe fires on a priority watershed basis through long-term restoration. Seeding the burned area will help mitigate encroaching invasive species. 6) State of Utah-Catastrophic Wildfire Reduction Strategy-Protecting the health and welfare of Utahns and our lands. Priority Action Areas- Southwest Region 6, Iron County. 7) Utah Comprehensive Wildlife Conservation Strategy- A) Conservation actions-Protect and rehabilitate remaining low elevation habitat for Mule Deer (pg. 6-60). B) Key Actions- Control invasive vegetation and plant desirable plants (Pg. K-11). 8) Strategic Management Plan for Wild Tukey-Division of Wildlife Resources (UDWR 2000, Publication 00-25). Grasses provide food for adults and are especially important to poults as an environment where they can effectively forage for insects. Poults need an environment that produces insects and in which they can efficiently forage. Poults need an area that provides enough cover to hide them, but allows the adult hen unobstructed vision for protection from predators. Seeding will help establish desirable grass and forbs to provide insect habitat for wild turkey's. 9) Dixie NF Noxious Weed Management Plan (EA 2000). Scotch Thistle and other invasive plants.
List management plans where this project will address an objective or strategy in the plan. Describe how the project area overlaps the objective or strategy in the plan and the relevance of the project to the successful implementation of those plans. It is best to provide this information in a list format with the description immediately following the plan objective or strategy.
*
Fire/Fuels
This project will help to prevent the establishment of annual grasses and noxious weeds that are more prone to fire and will change the fire frequency. Seeding will also help to reduce the risk of future fires by having vegetation that holds more moisture later into the summer. This process supports healthy forest growth by creating a fire resilient ecosystem that will also benefit species that utilize this area for forage and habitat, while also reducing the risk of future wildfire threat. Values at risk in the event of a wildfire include homes and structures in Pine Valley, private land and homes and structures in Grass Valley. These communities and areas are adjacent to the Forsyth Fire perimeter.
If applicable, detail how the proposed project will significantly reduce the risk of fuel loading and/or continuity of hazardous fuels including the use of fire-wise species in re-seeding operations. Describe the value of any features being protected by reducing the risk of fire. Values may include; communities at risk, permanent infrastructure, municipal watersheds, campgrounds, critical wildlife habitat, etc. Include the size of the area where fuels are being reduced and the distance from the feature(s) at risk.
*
Water Quality/Quantity
The Forsyth fire impacted multiple watersheds and municipal water sources including the Headwater of the Santa Clara and its tributaries, Grass valley Creek HUC -Water canyon, BArk Hollow, Reservoir Cyn, Mill cyn. Risk to agricultural and municipal water supplies is high with Very Likely probability of damage or loss, and Moderate magnitude of consequences based on hydro modeling .Impacts of recent flooding and debris flows have already impacted the Pine Valley Rec area and the town of Pine Valley Seeding the proposed burned areas will help to reduce the amount of run-off, sedimentation and provide soil stabilization. The straw bomb and seeding of sterile triticale is an ideal treatment for this rugged burn area and is suspected to have good success in this terrain based on results from similar methods on nearby district fires such as the mill flat fire and west valley fires.
Describe how the project has the potential to improve water quality and/or increase water quantity, both over the short and long term. Address run-off, erosion, soil infiltration, and flooding, if applicable.
*
Compliance
All actions proposed are covered by federal policy for post wildfire rehabilitation and restoration.
Description of efforts, both completed and planned, to bring the proposed action into compliance with any and all cultural resource, NEPA, ESA, etc. requirements. If compliance is not required enter "not applicable" and explain why not it is not required.
*
Methods
This proposal seeks to utilize State of Utah Contracting Services to provide for a number of services. Seeding will take place on 2028 non-wilderness area acres and an additional 249 acres in the Pine Valley Wilderness area. Hill slope treatments are planned for 560 acres overlapping the seeded areas and would consist of application of ag straw. Also in the seeded area we plan to chain or harrow approximately 300 acres of accessible ground. Apart from the treatments in the seeded area, we have also identified an area north of bark hollow that has a good understory of seeded species from a recent historical treatment but would benefit from an herbicide treatment to combat cheatgrass invasion into the areas that burned in the historical treatment. We plan to contract for approximately 100 acres of rejuvra application on this area.
Describe the actions, activities, tasks to be implemented as part of the proposed project; how these activities will be carried out, equipment to be used, when, and by whom.
*
Monitoring
The Forest Service will set up photo plots on different slopes, elevations, and vegetation types to monitor representative areas within this proposed seeding area during the growing season following the treatment. This will help to determine the initial success of this treatment. Additional USFS Long-term vegetation monitoring plots are established in the burned area and nearby as well as UDWR range trend plots. MIMs or PFC stream reach survey plots are also established in the burn affected area (such as water canyon) and will provide pre and post fire data.
Describe plans to monitor for project success and achievement of stated objectives. Include details on type of monitoring (vegetation, wildlife, etc.), schedule, assignments and how the results of these monitoring efforts will be reported and/or uploaded to this project page. If needed, upload detailed plans in the "attachments" section.
*
Partners
The partners for this project include the US Forest Service, Utah Division of Wildlife Resources, NRCS, Washington County, Pine Valley Range Permittees, and non-profit organizations. Partners have been engaged throughout the process of the fire with regular cooperators meetings and since it has been contained multiple planning meetings to develop a restoration plan. While the BAER funding has been very minimal all agree on the need for the treatments and will continue to seek funding through any avenues that become available.
List any and all partners (agencies, organizations, NGO's, private landowners) that support the proposal and/or have been contacted and included in the planning and design of the proposed project. Describe efforts to gather input and include these agencies, landowners, permitees, sportsman groups, researchers, etc. that may be interested/affected by the proposed project. Partners do not have to provide funding or in-kind services to a project to be listed.
*
Future Management
The Forsyth Fire affected two pastures of the Pine Valley Allotment, The Mountain Pasture and Pine Valley Pasture. Rest will take place on burned acres for a minimum of two growing seasons. The burned area of the Mountain Pasture is somewhat isolated from the rest of the mountain pasture due to a mix of rugged topography and fencing. The Pine Valley Pasture surround the town of Pine Valley. existing fencing will be used to facilitate the rest needed within the project area.
Detail future methods or techniques (including administrative actions) that will be implemented to help in accomplishing the stated objectives and to insure the long term success/stability of the proposed project. This may include: post-treatment grazing rest and/or management plans/changes, wildlife herd/species management plan changes, ranch plans, conservation easements or other permanent protection plans, resource management plans, forest plans, etc.
*
Sustainable Uses of Natural Resources
Pine Valley Ranger District personnel will work with livestock permittees on future management of the burned area. Seeded acres will be rested from livestock grazing for two growing seasons. Grazing after rest will be monitored and take place in compliance of Forest Service regulations.
Potential for the proposed action to improve quality or quantity of sustainable uses such as grazing, timber harvest, biomass utilization, recreation, etc. Grazing improvements may include actions to improve forage availability and/or distribution of livestock.
Title Page
Project Details
Finance
Species
Habitats
Seed
Comments
Images/Documents
Completion Form
Project Summary Report