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Figure 2. Fires of Interest and watersheds affected or in proximity to those fires.

               Strategy 2. Forest/Upland Restoration and Management

               Activities under this strategy refer largely to work designed to improve or sustain terrestrial
               environments. Projects may be developed at a broad scale to restore ecosystems such as grasslands,
               chaparral, or forest stands, but depending on the locations most impacted by the fires and identified by
               USFS staff or through Strategy 1 assessments, projects may be designed to directly focus on the recovery
               of individual species of interest to the ANF such as gray pine or live oak.

               Seed Collection/Propagation - Changes in fire regime, including increased intensity or frequency, may
               decimate standing vegetation and the seed bank within the soil. As high intensity fires become more
               frequent, burned landscapes become more susceptible to converting from diverse native vegetation
               communities to monocultures dominated by invasive plants. Seed collection and propagation is
               therefore important to ensuring a source for conducting restoration. The ANF has a particular need to
               collect and propagate seed from native chaparral, coastal sage, live oak, gray pine, and big cone
               Douglas-fir.

               Revegetation - In order to restore forest and upland environments, replanting native species where
               native vegetation communities once existed may be necessary where natural recovery processes have
               been delayed or altered as a result of wildfire or other stressors. Vegetation communities of particular
               interest to the ANF are chaparral, coastal sage, live oak, gray pine, and big cone Douglas-fir.

               Prescribed Burn - Prescribed burns may help some areas replicate the natural process of wildfire, which
               reduces fuels, removes competitive invasive species, promotes germination of fire adapted species such
               as big cone Douglas-fir, and increases diversity and age structure in vegetative environments. On the
               ANF, prescribed burns may have particular applications in maintaining riparian corridor and oak grove
               regeneration.

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