Fire, a natural disturbance inherent to most woodlands, rangelands, and grasslands, has also served as a valuable tool for humans to manage diverse ecosystems. Wildland fires encompass a spectrum of events, from controlled, low-severity prescribed burns to extensive, high-severity wildfires. Similar to other natural disturbances like windstorms or hurricanes, fire has significantly shaped the American landscape.
For millennia, the natural development and structure of Western conifer forests and associated deciduous woodlands have been inextricably linked to wildfire regimes. However, a shift occurred in the early 20th century with the widespread implementation of wildfire suppression activities across Western forests and other federal lands. This suppression altered historical fire regimes, impacting forest structure and health.
Beginning in the late 1960s and early 1970s, fire management began to evolve as land managers recognized that past suppression efforts had contributed to the escalating size, intensity, and duration of wildfires and longer wildfire season, exacerbating their impact. This was also amplified by a combination of other factors such as an increase in construction and human development in the wildland urban interface, changes in forest management practices, invasive annual grasses, and more persistent drought conditions since the 1970s. As of 2025, fire’s crucial role in forest management continues to be re-evaluated as strategies adapt to better mitigate wildfire risk and restore fire-adapted ecosystems.
Most recently, land management agencies in Nevada have collaborated on planning and implementing the Nevada Cohesive Strategy to prevent, respond to, and thrive in high wildfire danger areas. The strategy includes three tenets that guide the agencies’ plans and actions:
- Conserve, enhance, and protect resilient landscapes that can withstand wildfire, insects, and other threats while maintaining ecological health and function.
- Support the development of fire adapted communities that can withstand and survive wildfire events without significant suppression support.
- Sustain safe and effective wildfire response that can keep wildfires as small as possible with properly equipped firefighting forces.
Nevada’s diverse ecosystems, from the towering Sierra Nevada forests to the sprawling pinyon-juniper woodlands and rangelands of the Basin and Range, depend on fire as a vital natural management force. When executed under planned conditions, prescribed fire becomes an indispensable tool that actively reduces hazardous fuel loads, revitalizes wildlife habitats, replenishes soil nutrients, and stimulates vigorous plant regeneration. Under carefully managed conditions, even natural wildfires can bestow similar ecological advantages. However, the destructive consequences of uncontrolled wildfires, whether naturally ignited or human-caused, demand extensive and lengthy recovery efforts.