When we see a wildfire, our first response is to put it out. For decades, the Forest Service has done just that when it came to wildland fires. But science has changed the way we think about wildland fire and the way we manage it. We still suppress fires, especially if they threaten people and communities, but we understand that fire has a role in nature – one that can lead to healthy ecosystems. So we look for ways to manage it to play its role, for instance, by igniting prescribed fires.
The Forest Service conducts cutting-edge research and develops tools to help land managers better understand and manage fire. Our scientists study fire behavior and the effects of fire on ecosystems and society, as well as offer management options.
Username: All_the_Best Published on 2024-12-24 05:05:11 ID NUMBER: 127749
When we see a wildfire, our first response is to put it out. For decades, the Forest Service has done just that when it came to wildland fires. But science has changed the way we think about wildland fire and the way we manage it. We still suppress fires, especially if they threaten people and communities, but we understand that fire has a role in nature – one that can lead to healthy ecosystems. So we look for ways to manage it to play its role, for instance, by igniting prescribed fires.
The Forest Service conducts cutting-edge research and develops tools to help land managers better understand and manage fire. Our scientists study fire behavior and the effects of fire on ecosystems and society, as well as offer management options.
More than 73,000 wildfires burn an average of about 7 million acres of private, state and federal land in the U.S. each year. Forest Service firefighters respond to a significant number of those, either because they are burning on National Forest System land or because they are providing assistance to another federal, tribal, state or local partner.
We need to be prepared with highly trained people, well designed tools and high performing equipment to respond safely and effectively to forest and grassland fires. Responding to fires often requires a mix of ground firefighters and aerial firefighting
Predictive Services provides information about fire weather, fire danger/fuels, and intelligence/resource status information that fire managers need to anticipate significant wildfire activity and determine where to poisiton firefighters, engines, aircraft and other wildfire suppression assets to respond to it.
National Predictive Services products include weekly and monthly significant wildland fire potential outlooks, intelligence reports that are produced daily or weekly depending on wildfire activity, and annual reports.
An Incident Management Team is a group of trained professionals that responds to national, regional or local emergencies. Although the primary purpose of an Incident Management Team (IMT) is for wildfire response, an IMT can respond to a wide range of national and international emergencies, including wildfires, floods, earthquakes, hurricanes, tornadoes, tsunami, riots, spilling of hazardous materials, and other natural or human-caused incidents.
After some wildfires, the Forest Service may need to implement rehabilitation and restoration activities. Rehabilitation and restoration is a long-term process that focuses on repairing infrastructure and natural resource damages caused by the fire.
The objective of the Burned Area Emergency Response (BAER) program is to identify post-wildfire threats to human life and safety, property and critical natural or cultural resources on National Forest System lands and take immediate actions, as appropriate, to manage unacceptable risks. This stabilization work begins before the fire is out and may continue for up to a year.
When we see a wildfire, our first response is to put it out. For decades, the Forest Service has done just that when it came to wildland fires. But science has changed the way we think about wildland fire and the way we manage it. We still suppress fires, especially if they threaten people and communities, but we understand that fire has a role in nature – one that can lead to healthy ecosystems. So we look for ways to manage it to play its role, for instance, by igniting prescribed fires.
The Forest Service conducts cutting-edge research and develops tools to help land managers better understand and manage fire. Our scientists study fire behavior and the effects of fire on ecosystems and society, as well as offer management options.
Chennai has only rain for a few days 2023
Look at the situation in Chennai, it has been raining for a few days, making it difficult for people to move around and do their work.
Tamil Nadu Tamilnadu
চেন্নাই কয়েকদিন ধরে শুধু বৃষ্টি ২০২৩
চেন্নাইয়ের অবস্থা দেখুন কয়েকদিন ধরে শুধু বৃষ্টি মানুষের চলাচল এবং কাজের বিষণ অসুবিধা
Monday 04 December]
Monday 04 December CHORFD2023
I still remember that lost childhood, I really want to fly a kite now but I can't get back those times I still remember those memories
আজও মনে পড়ে সেই হারিয়ে যাওয়া ছোটবেলা ঘুড়ি উড়াতে খুব ইচ্ছে করে এখন কিন্তু ফিরে পায় না সেই সময়গুলো স্মৃতিগুলো আজও মনে পড়ে
#Publish #ThePublish
Monday 28 March 2022
Code number: UUUUHHHHSS
The moment just before iftar is our iftar today
ইফতারের ঠিক আগ মুহূর্ত আমাদের আজকের ইফতার #Publish #ThePublish
Saturday 28 August 2022
Code number: MPBYAKKACH
Flood water inside the house
Flood Salgara Udaipur Gomati Tripura, Monday 26 August 2024
ঘরের ভেতরে বন্যার পানি
বন্যা শালগাড়া উদয়পুর গোমতি ত্রিপুরা, সোমবার 26 আগস্ট 2024।
Code number: FLOODS2024
Akkas Mia s aunty and Sumaiya
Pictures of the Relatives
Four Pictures of the Relationship. আত্মীয়দের চারটি ছবি, আক্কাস মিয়া, খতেজা বাগম ও সোমাইয়া আক্তারের চারটি ছবি, Abdul Akkas Miah Aftar Amin Akash, Khoteja Khataja Khoti Khati, Somaiya Somia somiya sumia sumiya Sumaia sumaiya, Aktar Akter Akhtar Akhter Akthar Akther, IMG Images Photos Pictures Pics.
Photo taken on Nov 24, 2019 10:43:04 AM
Code number: AMAS242019
Mustard's Fields KTLBDBDKTL Mustard's Trees 🌲 Mustard's Oil 🏡 Kathalia, Miahbajar Miahbazar Miabajar Miabazar, Chauddagram, Comilla, Bangladesh. Photo taken on Jan 1, 2020 3:09:32 PM Wed, Jan 1, 2020 • 3:09 PM LOCATION Map of the location at which the photo was taken Tripura 23.361, 91.308 IMG20200101150933.jpg 13.0MP 3120 x 4160 6.8 MB OPPO OPPO A3s ƒ/2.2 1/330 3.47mm ISO100
Photo - Portrait - Jan 1, 2020, 3:09:28 PM
As omnivores, foxes in the Artic eat voles, mice, lemmings, rabbits and other small animals throughout the fall and winter. In the spring, they supplement their diet with nesting birds, and are often seen sneaking around the tundra attempting to steal Canada goose eggs. In summer, they add in insects and berries to their menu. They’ve also been known to catch young lake trout by jumping from the bank into a school of fish in shallow water. In short, they’re opportunists.
Foxes will also eat seal pups, beaver, reptiles, fruits and even garbage. (Hinterland Who’s Who, n.d.). Red foxes stock up, hiding their food in the dirt or snow and marking it with urine. I, for one, am glad we have a freezer and pantry instead.
Mandrake the Magician is a syndicated newspaper comic strip, created by Lee Falk before he created The Phantom.[1][2] Mandrake began publication on June 11, 1934. Phil Davis soon took over as the strip's illustrator, while Falk continued to script. The strip was distributed by King Features Syndicate.[3]
Mandrake, along with the Phantom Magician in Mel Graff's The Adventures of Patsy, is regarded as the first superhero of comics by comics historians such as Don Markstein, who writes, "Some people say Mandrake the Magician, who started in 1934, was comics' first superhero."[1][4][5][6]
Davis worked on the strip until his death in 1964, when Falk recruited artist Fred Fredericks.[3] With Falk's death in 1999, Fredericks became both writer and artist. The Sunday-newspaper Mandrake strip ended December 29, 2002. The daily newspaper strip ended mid-story on July 6, 2013, when Fred Fredericks retired, and a reprint of Pursuit of the Cobra (D220) from 1995 began July 8, 2013.