(Editor’s Note: The following information came from a news release from the Sherburne County National Wildlife Refuge).
The Sherburne National Wildlife Refuge is planning a series of prescribed burns to be conducted during the spring season to help maintain the natural habitats for wildlife and reduce the chance of wildfires outside the refuge.
The refuge averages around 4,000 acres of prescribed burning each year.
Prescribed burns, fires that are carefully planned, are beneficial to native prairie and oak savanna plant communities at the refuge. The burns are conducted under a special set of guidelines for weather and safety called a “prescription.” These prescriptions are planned to accomplish specific objectives for vegetation and wildlife management.
Before a burn begins, temperature, relative humidity, fuel conditions, wind speed and wind direction are measured. Refuge staff takes into account smoke drift, nearby buildings, livestock and other safety factors when deciding whether to burn. According to Kris Larson, Fire Management Officer, the burn is conducted only if conditions meet the approved “prescription.”
“We want the public to know that safety is our utmost concern,” Kris said. “By reducing fuels through prescribed burning, we not only benefit wildlife, but also minimize the threat that wildfires on or around the refuge may have to the surrounding public.”
Through habitat management programs, such as prescribed fire, Sherburne National Wildlife Refuge is restoring the natural ecosystem. The Oak Savanna ecosystem, with its plants and wildlife, is adapted to fire and depends on periodic burning for continued existence.
Prescribed burns at Sherburne National Wildlife Refuge are planned to be conducted in March, April and May, or in the fall and winter, when weather and safety conditions are right to meet the objectives of the burns.
Sherburne National Wildlife Refuge is located northwest of Zimmerman, with Refuge Headquarters off Co. Rd. 9.
For questions concerning the refuge’s prescribed burns, call (763) 260-3078 or visit the website at fws.gov/refuge/sherburne. TTY users may reach the refuge through the Federal Information Relay Service at 1-800-877-8339.