BLM thins trees to restore land health

Webp 21edited

BLM thins trees to restore land health

The following press releases was published by the U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management on Nov. 21, 2019. It is reproduced in full below.

ELY, Nev. - The Bureau of Land Management Ely District’s fuels staff is hand-thinning and masticating pinyon-pine and juniper trees in the Black Canyon and Nine-mile Summit areas of the Egan Basin, about 50 miles north of Ely.

Tree thinning is one of several treatment options to be utilized as part of the Egan and Johnson Basins Restoration Project that was designed to reduce catastrophic wildfire risk and improve watershed health in the Egan Basin by restoring sagebrush and other communities, including the pinyon-juniper woodlands. Other options include prescribed fire use, aerial and ground seeding, and invasive plant and noxious weed treatments. The multi-year landscape-scale project calls for BLM to treat up to 24,375 acres of an 84,675-acre project area.

Part of the district’s fire management program, the fuels team works with homeowners, local, state and federal agencies, and Native American tribes to design and implement projects that protect communities and restore and maintain public land health.

Source: U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management

More News