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Land Management: Fire Ecology
Text by Ray Esquierio
Fire has been a tool of humanity since
the dawn of time. It has been feared, revered, and worshiped. Because
of its raw power to consume and destroy nearly everything in its
path, humans continue to fear its impact on human society and the
environment. Wild fires are considered one of the most dangerous
natural disasters, next to earthquakes and floods, in California.
However, recent research has uncovered fires usefulness for managing
chaparral growth and controlling wild fires (Bean & Lawton 1993:
38).
According to primary sources taken
from the first explorers of California, Natives were using fire
to manage both plant and animal resources for food and material
items. In 1792, the naturalist Jose Longinos Martinez wrote that
all of California’s “gentiles” (from Alta and
Baja) used fire to burn brush for hunting and to clear valleys in
order to promote new growth in which they used as highly valued
greens (Bean & Lawton 1993: 39). During the mission period,
fires were set so frequently that Spanish, and then Mexican, officials
made it against the law for Indians to burn the land (Blackburn
& Anderson 1993: 129-32).
Europeans and Indigenous people had conflicting cultures and world-view’s
which did not see eye to eye when it came to fire. Native people
had lived in California for a long time developing their land management
skills through trial and error. They passed on this style of managing
natural resources to countless generations. Europeans were used
to plowing and working the soil in order to produce food, and fire
was used in war and destruction when it was set to open areas. Natives
used fire to promote the growth of grasses used for baskets as well
as other plants used for food (Bean & Lawton 1993: 38);(Ortiz
1993: 203-4). While Europeans saw the open California valleys as
pastoral land available for grazing their animals, Natives saw these
new animals as eating their plant foods which they relied on to
get them through the winter.
The plant communities of Coastal Sage Scrub and Chaparral required
fires to clear away the old dry brush which, if left unchecked,
could be fuel for a wild fire. Fire also had another benefit for
the oak woodlands. The fires would rid the trees of any parasites,
like weevils in the under growth and bark, which were harmful to
the tree. Regular fires also cleared away the undergrowth to prevent
serious damage to the trees from the intense heat of a fire with
to much fuel. The Native people knew the consequences would be disastrous
if an acorn crop failed, but with these practices, the natives controlled
parasites, wild fire, and increased the acorn yield each year (McCarthy
1993: 221). The population was able to benefit from plants that
had evolved to deal with mans use of fire by reproducing seeds rapidly
after a fire (Bean & Lawton 1993: 38).
The leaders of the people along with the pupulem (a society of men
with knowledge among the Takic speakers) controlled where and when
to set fires according to the weather. They also performed rituals
to insure the continuance of their way of life by controlling the
weather, especially rain (McCarthy 1993: 225-6). Fire and rain worked
together to transform the Natives land into bountiful fields for
humans and the four leggeds like rabbits and deer which benefited
from man’s ingenuity. Without the rains after a fire, the
seeds would not germinate, and dangerous landslides could occur.
The fires were started by the leaders in the fall when the lighter
rains came to ensure the growth small vegetation before the harsher
rains of winter ravaged the land.
California was not a wild or virgin land ready for development by
a more civilized society. It was a well managed and highly productive
land which even yielded a harvest in the worst of times. California’s
Native population had the highest density of humans per square mile
north of Mexico because its land was extremely productive and the
people were ingenious landlords. California was made so by generation
after generation of natives who took their role as caretakers of
the land seriously because the continuance of their way of life
depended on this knowledge of the environment.
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