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photo of fire damage to tree trunks and forest vegetation

Our Big Backyard winter 2018

Explore great places and more in the winter 2018 issue of Our Big Backyard magazine.

 
  • Tagalog

Rebirth of a forest: The Columbia River Gorge after the Eagle Creek fire

photo of fire damage to tree trunks and forest vegetation
Forest fires in the rainy parts of the Northwest don’t burn the landscape uniformly. Here, all the ground-level plants were cleared by the fire, but the ferns and shrubs just feet away were spared.

Forest fires in the rainy parts of the Northwest don’t burn the landscape uniformly. Here, all the ground-level plants were cleared by the fire, but the ferns and shrubs just feet away were spared.

Douglas fir tree burned by forest fire fallen to the ground amid a grove of alder trees
A Douglas fir lies amid a grove of burned alders near Interstate 84. This tree, though destroyed in the fire and felled by firefighters, will take decades and maybe more than a century to decompose.

A Douglas fir lies amid a grove of burned alders near Interstate 84. This tree, though destroyed in the fire and felled by firefighters, will take decades and maybe more than a century to decompose. The whole time, it will nourish the forest’s plants and animals.

fallen leaves and conifer needles on the forest floor after a forest fire
While the ground in this part of the forest was burned badly, newly fallen leaves are already beginning to repair the soil.

While the ground in this part of the forest was burned badly, newly fallen leaves are already beginning to repair the soil.

photo of burned section of forest from the Columbia Gorge wildfire
The fire in the gorge was generally worse on steeper mountains. In this photo, the light brown trees have needles that were roasted but never ignited, while the dark brown and black trees were consumed by flames.

The fire in the gorge was generally worse on steeper mountains. In this photo, the light brown trees have needles that were roasted but never ignited, while the dark brown and black trees were consumed by flames. 

ridge of trees burned from the Columbia Gorge wildfire
A ridge lined with matchstick trees indicates the type of areas that burned the most intensely and are at risk of landslides.

A ridge lined with matchstick trees indicates the type of areas that burned the most intensely and are at risk of landslides.

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Metro logo

Rebirth of a forest: The Columbia River Gorge after the Eagle Creek fire

By Cory Eldridge
Jan. 3, 2018 4:53 p.m.

Bylined articles are written by Metro staff and do not necessarily represent the opinions of Metro or the Metro Council. Learn more

By Cory Eldridge, Jonathan Soll and Katy Weil

When the first images of the Eagle Creek fire reached social media, the bereaved lovers of the Columbia River Gorge wrote post after post eulogizing the places that, from the awful photographs, seemed lost forever. Nearly all included words like “destroyed,” “death,” or “memory.”

The fire caused significant economic and emotional damage. But the gorge as a natural wonder was neither lost nor destroyed. The Eagle Creek fire, tragic as it was, has created an opportunity for people to witness a natural process often hidden in far-flung wilderness. For the rest of our lives, we have the opportunity to see the rebirth and coming of age of a forest.

Let’s take a walk in the forest, starting immediately after the fire and trekking to see the forest in the first spring, a few years from now, and five and 20 years in the future.

After the flames are out 

The forest is not as charred as you imagined. There are cliff faces that seem as though a charcoal waterfall flowed over them, leaving nothing but matchstick trees. From the top of one Douglas fir tree, flames reached to ignite the low branches of its upslope neighbor, creating a wall of flames.

For every burned-out mountain slope, there’s another that’s as green as it ever was. Even the heavily burned areas are dotted with half-scorched trees and trees that didn’t seem to even notice the fire. More common are the swathes of rusty brown where the needles of evergreens roasted but never ignited.

Walk under the canopy, and you’ll see a similar mosaic. In one spot, the ground is covered in charcoal limbs and carbonized fern fronds. Ten yards away, saplings, shrubs and ferns soak up the sun. One side of a big Douglas fir is scarred, the other hardly touched. There are damaged trees everywhere. Many of them won’t survive their injuries or the diseases that follow but many will carry on.

The soil tells the same story. Areas baked hot by smoldering logs and the collective heat of hundreds of burning tree trunks are dead, but only temporarily. Leaf litter and decomposed leaves and twigs burned off the surface. Roots, seeds, mycelia (mushroom roots) and the bacteria that make soil a living thing are consumed or killed by the heat. Already, though, the trees are dropping needles and twigs that will fertilize the soil. In many places, the soil and its mysterious unseen world remain alive to launch a new forest.

Most heartening: Just weeks after the fire, grasses are growing.

First spring

Spring has arrived, and young greenery explodes in all but the most intensely burned areas. Shrubs like mock orange, snowberry and kinnikinnick stretch into open spaces. Post-fire specialists like fireweed and morel mushrooms boom. Resprouting trees like maples, oaks and madrones bounce back with new growth from their undamaged roots.

For animals, the action is in the dead but still standing trees called snags. 

Trees killed in forest fires are not ghosts of the forest past; they’re vital members of the forest community and stand witness to the cycle of life. Before the fire, the nutritious insides of the trees were off limits, but now the trees’ defenses are diminished. To insects, the snag is like a grilled onion: burned on the outside, sweet and tender on the inside. This first spring, insects are already feasting and laying broods that will have more food than their kind has seen in hundreds, maybe thousands, of generations. Their populations will erupt, and the birds will come. 

Some birds are fire specialists rarely seen in the gorge. Olive-sided flycatchers arrive for the bug bonanza and several types of woodpeckers move into some of the most burned areas, drilling and digging out holes in the snags to get after bark beetles. The woodpeckers are also creating habitat for other animals slowly making their way back to the forest. 

  • pileated woodpecker on the trunk of a tree
    Pileated woodpecker: Its bright red mohawk and noisy call make this crow-sized woodpecker easy to spot. Its massive beak rips apart trees as it looks for bugs.

  • fireweed flowers in bloom
    Fireweed: This plant earned its name by being adept at spreading through a burned-out area. The gorgeous pink flowers attract pollinators. Photo: Kristi / CC BY

  • house wren with nest inside hollowed tree trunk
    House wren: Another common bird in the region, the house wren may be easier to spot in burned-over areas. Keep a close eye for mouse-sized shadows moving on the ground. Photo: USFWS

When you head back to the Columbia River Gorge for a hike, keep an eye out for these birds and plants that make up some of the first species to return to the forest after a wildfire.

The next few years

When you hike in the gorge two or three years from now, you’ll see the regrowth from that first spring filling out. Shrubs are maturing, and grasses and wildflowers are abundant. This is called the early seral stage. Because of current fire management and modern forestry practices, early seral habitats are rare in the area’s forests. But they are an important component of a healthy landscape.

Early seral plants are mega food producers, pumping out nectar, pollen, seeds, and tender leaves and shoots. That attracts pollinators like bees and flies, grass-eaters from tiny insects to massive elk, and seed-loving wildlife like mice and birds. All of these, of course, bring in predators, from hawks and owls to foxes and cougars. Everyone has plenty to eat.

Even severely burned areas now show signs of recovery as the soil is slowly renewed by nutrient-rich dust and seeds carried by wind and animals. Little conifer sprouts start to grow.

5 years later

By now it’s difficult to spot signs of the fire in many places. But your keen eye knows that the snags are the clearest legacy. At this point, it’s hard to argue that a snag is dead: its tree life may be over, but it’s full of life. In this area, more than 100 animals live in snags, including mammals, amphibians, birds, bugs and reptiles. 

Since they arrived, the woodpeckers never stopped excavating new holes. Now there are more holes than woodpeckers, but the forest provides plenty of new tenants. Wood ducks, owls, bluebirds, chickadees, brown creepers and nuthatches move in. Northern flying squirrels and Douglas squirrels make homes in the smaller holes while raccoons, gray foxes and pine martens den up in the big ones. Without the woodpeckers, these animals would be homeless.

Reptiles struggle to escape fires, and their populations suffer mightily. It’s not until now that the gorge’s scaly residents like garter snakes and northern alligator lizards make it back. 

  • Northern Flicker standing on leaf-covered forest floor
    Northern flicker: This large woodpecker lives throughout the region, even in urban neighborhoods. It uses its powerful beak to create nesting holes in trees.

  • Kinnikinnick flowers in bloom
    Kinnikinnick: The quality that makes this a favorite groundcover for gardeners – it’s robust – allows it to bounce back quickly from fire.

  • close up view of morel mushroom
    Morel mushrooms: This family of mushrooms has several members that thrive post-fire. Take caution and follow the law if you decide to harvest morels.

20 years later

For us, the fire seems like a long-ago event. The hardest-hit areas, the places that lost most or all of their trees, will largely be meadows of grasses, shrubs, and wildflowers abuzz with insects and birds, crawling with mice and lizards. But you’ll see trees making 
a slow march. The conifers, maples and oaks that began to grow the first spring after the fire have birthed their own seedlings and saplings.

About now, snags enter the last stage of their post-tree existence. For two decades, beetles, worms and fungi have eaten away at their roots, and the trunks finally fall. Still, the log has decades – maybe even two centuries – of life to give. Lying there, it shelters wildlife, adds nutrients to the soil and even becomes a nursery for the tree seedlings that will take its place.

This is why scientists call large snags and logs legacy trees. They are an inheritance for the young forest from the old. The fire in the Columbia River Gorge didn’t take away that inheritance. The fire gave it.

Previous: Part 1

Journey into the future to explore the Columbia River Gorge forests recovering after the wildfire, find tips and outings to get outside with kids -- and more. Read the winter issue of Our Big Backyard, Metro's quarterly parks and nature magazine.

Next: Part 3

As I came over the hill, I could see Canemah Bluff across the Willamette River. There was a large column of smoke rising up. As I looked closer, I could see flames on the ground.
 

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