Forest blackened by Saint Andrews-area fire sprouts signs of life - Action News
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New Brunswick

Forest blackened by Saint Andrews-area fire sprouts signs of life

More than three months after the Stein Lake fire burned out of control in Chamcook and Bocabec, north of Saint Andrews, signs of new life are sprouting up.

Homeowner sees renewal, UNB tree expert says fire a normal part of forest regeneration

Green vegetation borders a forest with trees charred black.
New vegetation has already started growing in the burn zone around Brian Childs's Bocabec home. (Mia Urquhart/CBC)

Within hours of evacuating from his Bocabec home on May 28, as billows of thick smoke rolled in through the trees, Brian Childs watched a video of the fire taken across the cove from his property.

"It was like a lava flow," said Childs.

"That was the most devastating part of it, to look like a lava flow coming down your road. And as you come up it now, it's burned on both sides, so you can imagine the intensity of the fire at the time."

Driven by very strong winds, the wildfire that began on the South Glenelg Road near Stein Lake, about 13 kilometresnorth of Saint Andrews, N.B., reached his heavily wooded 24-hectare property within hours.

A man in a white brimmed hat is sitting outside.
Childs says he was struck by how close the fire had come to his home and estimates it burned to within 30 centimetres of his house. (Roger Cosman/CBC)

By the time the all-clear came for residents to return to their homes on May. 31, a neighbour had already reassured Childs that his home had survived. Even with that knowledge, arriving to inspect his property was still an overwhelming experience.

He walkedaround his house, pausing at one end. Even from a distance, his shudder was unmistakable.

Recalling that moment, Childs said he was struck by how close the fire had come. He estimates it burned to within 30 centimetresof his house.

WATCH | See the forest burned by the Stein Lake fire three months later:

Flying over the area that burned three months ago in New Brunswicks worst wildfire of the season

1 year ago
Duration 2:30
A bird's eye view of the remnants of a wildfire that tore through the woods in Chamcook and Bocabec reveals a scorched path amidst the greenery.

With a few exceptions, all of the trees that he can see from his house today are black and dead, affectingabout a third of his wooded property.

Childs said it's depressing living in the middle of a once-green, now-blackened, environment. But there are signs of hope.

"I didn't think it was going to come aroundbut all under the trees now, it's all coming back green. It's amazing how fast it regenerates itself. And that to me that's a wonderful thing."

Fire offers a fresh start

Fire has always been part of forest regeneration, says Loc D'Orangeville, an associate professor in the forestry program at the University of New Brunswick, who studies the life and history of forest trees.

"Fire is a normal part of our ecosystems. Even in the Wabanaki forest, the Acadian Forest, fire is one of the major natural drivers of forest regeneration. So it's not necessarily a bad thing.

"It's actually healthy for the forest to get a fresh start," said D'Orangeville,

A drone shot of damage caused by a forest fire.
Pushed by strong winds on May 28, the fire jumped from ridge to ridge and burned although separate paths through the forest, as seen in this photo, with a relatively green section in the middle. (Roger Cosman/CBC)

He said the areas of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick that burned in the spring are already showing a lot of green.

"You'll see already green plants growing back, you'll see ferns, you'll see herbaceous plants and potentially some young trees growing back already. So it's a really quick process."

The site of a forest fire can even be ideal for a lot of species,he said.

"You have lots of nutrients available, you have low competition. And so lots of plants will love that sort of environment and will be fierce competitors to actually fill the room, basically."

D'Orangeville said even without fire to dramatically re-set the playing field, forests are always changing and species come and go. It's called forest succession.

Closeup of a smiliing man with dark hair and glasses.
Loc D'Orangeville, a professor in the forestry program at the University of New Brunswick, says even without fire to dramatically re-set the playing field, forests are always changing. (Submitted by Loc D'Orangeville)

Wildfires simply give certain species an immediate jump on succession.

"Think about poplar, birch, cherries that are adapted to grow rapidly after such a massive disturbance. So they're the first ones to get in and grow fast, but then they die young and so they're going to be replaced by more shade-tolerant species."

Those are "later successional species" that are then followed by "climax species," like sugar maple and yellow birch, he said.

A lake in the foreground with blacked forest in the background.
This drone shot was taken from the other side of Bill's Lake toward Bocabec Cove. The fire came down from Clark's Mountain and continued to burn to the left, toward Bocabec Cove, and to the right, toward Kerr's Ridge. (Roger Cosman/CBC)

That could mean that after several decades, the forest will end up looking exactly like it did before it burned. But, said D'Orangeville, there are now other factors at play, such asclimate change.

"If we have a more stressful climate this might favour certain species over others."

In New Brunswick, thereareboreal and temperate species thatnaturally grow back after harvesting balsam fir, for example.

"But with climate change, we now know that it's less adapted to the warmer conditions. So you might have a shift towards more warm-adapted species like red maple."

What grows back immediately will depend on the intensity of the fire, said D'Orangeville.

"Some trees actually do very well with burning. Some trees have really thick bark. They can recover from a fire."

He said red and white pine can withstand fire and "actually take advantage of fires because it reduces competition and it allows them to grow better.

Drone shot of heavily burned areas of forest.
D'Orangeville says dead trees are 'critical components of a healthy forest ecosystem.' (Roger Cosman/CBC)

In some other cases, such as trembling aspen, "what you seeburned is dead, but what you don't see underground is actually very alive and well, D'Orangville said."So it doesn't mean because the tree is dark and burned that the tree is dead."

But if the fire is severe enough, there are no trees left to grow back. That means regrowth will depend on the seeds of neighbouring stands and which species can get their seeds to the burned area.

Dead trees give life

The trees that were definitely killed by the fire will eventually fall over, said D'Orangeville. But until that happens, he said "they'll become apartment buildings for lots of biodiversity."

"These dead trees are critical components of a healthy forest ecosystem," he said.

And some of those dead trees can also be salvaged, said Sarah Dickson-Hoyle, a postdoctoral research fellow at the University of British Columbia's faculty of forestry, whose PhDis in fire ecology and wildfire recovery with First Nations.

A drone shot of a forest with black sections and green ones.
Trees are often only charred on the outside, according to so they can still be used to prevent them from going to waste, Dickson-Hoyle says. (Roger Cosman/CBC)

When vast areas of woodland are burned, "there is often a real push" to "salvage-harvest" what's left.

She said the trees are often only charred on the outside, so they can still be used, preventing them from going to waste. Typically, though, they have "a shelf life" of only a few years.

For Childs, it took about a month after the fire, but the deer eventually came back to his property.

He points out two fawns, still sporting their baby spots, nibbling at the foot of a blackened tree trunk.

"So the animals are back and, you know, I'm content."