Expert says boreal forest ‘wouldn’t exist’ without wildfires
Although wildfires need to be controlled when they threaten people and their homes, a Saskatchewan professor studying forest fire regrowth says they’re crucial to the forest’s survival.
Without the fires, Saskatchewan’s boreal forest as we know it wouldn’t exist according to Jill Johnstone, an associate professor of biology at the U of S. She said in the absence of fire, moss would take over the forest and snuff out the nutrients trees depend on.
“Moss grows really, really well and the thing that keeps it from taking over everything is the occasional fire,” she said.
That means the same area of forest doesn’t need to burn every year, or even every ten years. In fact, Johnstone said a forest can withstand not having a fire for about 100 years before it starts to deteriorate. But because there’s so much vegetation in northern Canada, some areas can go that long without being hit by a wildfire. She said areas that have recently burned are less likely to burn again for about the next three decades.


