USING DEBRIS FLOW ANALYSES TO QUANTIFY LONG-TERM FIRE REGIMES OF NORTHERN ARIZONA PONDEROSA PINE AND MIXED CONIFER FORESTS IN STEEP TERRAIN
High severity burning is necessary for development of fire-induced debris flows. The presence of fire-related deposition in the study area suggests that detailed surface fire regimes reconstructed by dendrochronologic methods for analogous forests in low gradient terrain do not fully describe fire behavior in complex terrain. Our results suggest that stand-replacing fires occurred on centennial and multi-centennial scales in both ponderosa pine and mixed-conifer forests in steep terrain. This temporal pattern more closely resembles the fire regime of higher elevation spruce-fir forests than the fire regime of neighboring low gradient ponderosa pine and mixed conifer forests. The deposits infer that stand-replacing fire was a natural phenomenon prior to the advent of fire suppression and forest composition and density changes linked to modern fires. It is likely that the surface fire regime transitions into a mixed-severity regime in steep terrain through increased fuels preheating by crown stacking. Identification of tree species from charcoal macrofossils in deposits will help clarify whether steep terrain or proximity to spruce-fir forests is responsible for cyclic stand-replacing fire events in the study area. Results of this latest development are pending.