Prescribed Burn at Katama Keeps Fire Risk Low
Prescribed burns increase public safety, improve habitat, and help restore the landscape.
Ray Ewing
Columns of smoke, from fires set for ecological purposes, have grown increasingly familiar to Vineyarders.
Ray Ewing
Columns of smoke, from fires set for ecological purposes, have grown increasingly familiar to Vineyarders.
Ray Ewing
Chilmark fire chief Jeremy Bradshaw participated.
Ray Ewing
Plants may lose their top growth to a burn but retain the ability to regrow.
Ray Ewing
Clear day with little wind kept fire under control.
Ray Ewing
Thumbs up for controlled burns!
Ray Ewing
Burn keeps runway and surrounding land clear for planes.
Ray Ewing
Members of Martha's Vineyard Prescribed Fire Partnership kept fire under control.
Ray Ewing
Katama Air Park in Edgartown has seen burns almost annually since the site was protected for conservation in the 1980s.
Ray Ewing
Katama Air Park in Edgartown has seen burns almost annually since the site was protected for conservation in the 1980s.
Ray Ewing
Ray Ewing
Ray Ewing
Haze over Katama.
Ray Ewing
The Vineyard's sandplain has a long history of fires, which shaped the ecology of the habitat. Fire suppression interrupted the pattern, threatening rare wildlife that is adapted to frequent fires. The prescribed burns restore the fire-dependent natural communities and enhance public safety by reducing overgrown, potentially-flammable habitat.
