Climate change adaptation in wildland fire management and governance in Alaska

2018 Summer. Includes bibliographical references. In the sparsely populated landscape of Alaska, natural resource-dependent rural communities are experiencing the effects of a rapidly changing climate. Warming average temperatures have caused increases in wildland fire activity across the boreal and...

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Main Authors: Rutherford, Tait Kater, author, Schultz, Courtney, advisor, Duffy, Paul, committee member, Davis, Charles, committee member
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Colorado State University. Libraries 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10217/191459
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spelling ftmountainschol:oai:mountainscholar.org:10217/191459 2023-06-18T03:43:22+02:00 Climate change adaptation in wildland fire management and governance in Alaska Rutherford, Tait Kater, author Schultz, Courtney, advisor Duffy, Paul, committee member Davis, Charles, committee member 2018-09-10T20:05:36Z born digital masters theses application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/10217/191459 English eng eng Colorado State University. Libraries 2000-2019 Rutherford_colostate_0053N_15055.pdf https://hdl.handle.net/10217/191459 Copyright and other restrictions may apply. User is responsible for compliance with all applicable laws. For information about copyright law, please see https://libguides.colostate.edu/copyright. Text 2018 ftmountainschol 2023-06-03T17:49:04Z 2018 Summer. Includes bibliographical references. In the sparsely populated landscape of Alaska, natural resource-dependent rural communities are experiencing the effects of a rapidly changing climate. Warming average temperatures have caused increases in wildland fire activity across the boreal and tundra regions of Alaska, and climate change projections forecast further increases in fire frequency, severity, and extent. These projections have resulted in dire predictions for the already-strained fire management capacity of the state and federal land management agencies. In a fire management system historically focused on the protection of isolated communities and valued resources, increasing fire activity is causing the need for adaptation in fire management approaches and decision-making structures. In this thesis, I explore priorities, challenges, and adaptation in fire management and fire governance in Alaska. I use a qualitative analysis of a series of interviews with fire managers and stakeholders in the Alaska fire management community to derive an understanding of potential adaptation options in a complex management system. This thesis consists of three standalone chapters. The first of these chapters is a white paper that summarizes interview results. In this chapter, I identify four key issues to address in fire management in Alaska based on interviewee responses, including budgeting, staffing, the protection of remote values and subsistence hunting opportunities, and the potential for climate change adaptation and mitigation. The second chapter explores climate change adaptation in specific management approaches and the processes that may need to change to achieve those adaptations. I find that local collaboration, the integration of land and fire management responsibilities within the statewide fire management network, and the consideration of recent science are significant controls on the system's capacity for adaptation. In the third chapter, I broaden the scope of my analysis to the ... Text Tundra Alaska Mountain Scholar (Digital Collections of Colorado and Wyoming)
institution Open Polar
collection Mountain Scholar (Digital Collections of Colorado and Wyoming)
op_collection_id ftmountainschol
language English
description 2018 Summer. Includes bibliographical references. In the sparsely populated landscape of Alaska, natural resource-dependent rural communities are experiencing the effects of a rapidly changing climate. Warming average temperatures have caused increases in wildland fire activity across the boreal and tundra regions of Alaska, and climate change projections forecast further increases in fire frequency, severity, and extent. These projections have resulted in dire predictions for the already-strained fire management capacity of the state and federal land management agencies. In a fire management system historically focused on the protection of isolated communities and valued resources, increasing fire activity is causing the need for adaptation in fire management approaches and decision-making structures. In this thesis, I explore priorities, challenges, and adaptation in fire management and fire governance in Alaska. I use a qualitative analysis of a series of interviews with fire managers and stakeholders in the Alaska fire management community to derive an understanding of potential adaptation options in a complex management system. This thesis consists of three standalone chapters. The first of these chapters is a white paper that summarizes interview results. In this chapter, I identify four key issues to address in fire management in Alaska based on interviewee responses, including budgeting, staffing, the protection of remote values and subsistence hunting opportunities, and the potential for climate change adaptation and mitigation. The second chapter explores climate change adaptation in specific management approaches and the processes that may need to change to achieve those adaptations. I find that local collaboration, the integration of land and fire management responsibilities within the statewide fire management network, and the consideration of recent science are significant controls on the system's capacity for adaptation. In the third chapter, I broaden the scope of my analysis to the ...
format Text
author Rutherford, Tait Kater, author
Schultz, Courtney, advisor
Duffy, Paul, committee member
Davis, Charles, committee member
spellingShingle Rutherford, Tait Kater, author
Schultz, Courtney, advisor
Duffy, Paul, committee member
Davis, Charles, committee member
Climate change adaptation in wildland fire management and governance in Alaska
author_facet Rutherford, Tait Kater, author
Schultz, Courtney, advisor
Duffy, Paul, committee member
Davis, Charles, committee member
author_sort Rutherford, Tait Kater, author
title Climate change adaptation in wildland fire management and governance in Alaska
title_short Climate change adaptation in wildland fire management and governance in Alaska
title_full Climate change adaptation in wildland fire management and governance in Alaska
title_fullStr Climate change adaptation in wildland fire management and governance in Alaska
title_full_unstemmed Climate change adaptation in wildland fire management and governance in Alaska
title_sort climate change adaptation in wildland fire management and governance in alaska
publisher Colorado State University. Libraries
publishDate 2018
url https://hdl.handle.net/10217/191459
genre Tundra
Alaska
genre_facet Tundra
Alaska
op_relation 2000-2019
Rutherford_colostate_0053N_15055.pdf
https://hdl.handle.net/10217/191459
op_rights Copyright and other restrictions may apply. User is responsible for compliance with all applicable laws. For information about copyright law, please see https://libguides.colostate.edu/copyright.
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