Wildlife Commission Conducts Prescribed Burns to Improve Habitat

  • 22 January 2018
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RALEIGH, N.C. (Jan. 22, 2018) —  This is the time of year that North Carolina residents may start to see smoke in the vicinity of N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission game lands. What they’re witnessing is actually one of the most beneficial and cost-effective methods of managing habitat for wildlife ­– a prescribed burn.

A prescribed burn (or controlled burn) is an intentional burning of vegetation that the Commission employs to restore and maintain wildlife habitat on most of the 2 million acres of state game lands used by hunters, anglers and wildlife watchers throughout North Carolina.

The Commission’s burn season typically runs January through March. Some burns, however, are conducted into spring and summer, as warm season burning provides for better control of young hardwoods in certain habitats. Optimal conditions for a prescribed burn occur on cool-weather days with moisture in the air and minimal wind.

Fire is a natural occurrence that animals have adapted to. But each year during burn season, the Commission receives calls from people who are concerned for the animals’ ability to escape from the fire.

“The Commission utilizes burning techniques that ensure animals have time and room to escape,” said Chris Jordan, the Commission’s lands program coordinator. “Vegetation typically returns within a few weeks, and the animals will return shortly after. Quail and wild turkey, in particular, tend to return immediately after a burn to forage for mast that the fire uncovers.”

Many of North Carolina’s declining or rare wildlife species, such as the red-cockaded woodpecker, are adapted to fire or found only in fire-dependent habitat. Commission staff typically conducts maintenance burns in multi-year cycles to open groundcover for quail, grassland birds, deer and turkeys. Burning encourages production of native grasses and herbaceous vegetation, which provides valuable food and cover for a wide variety of wildlife species. Prescribed burns are also used to help reduce high levels of forest fuels (such as leaf litter and pine straw) that can cause deadly wildfires and to control disease and insects.

For more information on prescribed burns, view No Cause for Alarm and visit Prescribed Fire: What NC Citizens Need to Know. For more information on the Commission’s game lands program, including an interactive game land map, visit www.ncwildlife.org/gamelands.

Media Contact:

Ryan Kennemur
919-707-0186

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