Remote cameras capture life returning to Oregon forests after wildfire

By Cassandra Profita (OPB)
Sept. 10, 2021 1 p.m.

Ralph Bloemers was looking for the right place to put a wildlife camera in the burned forest surrounding the former mining camp at Jawbone Flats.

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The area is closed to the public, but the Opal Creek Ancient Forest Center invited Bloemers to document wildlife and forest recovery around its educational facility after the area burned in the Beachie Creek Fire last year.

“Oh, that’s a burned out structure up here,” Bloemers said, stopping short before a pile of twisted metal and ash. “That’s not doing it for me.”

He changed direction to look for game trails nearby. He stopped again among a grove of burned trees and looks up at the blackened canopy.

“It’s pretty shaded in here,” he said, unpacking his camera gear. “It’s going to take a while for the vegetation to come back because of the light.”

Bloemers, a co-founder of the nonprofit Crag Law Center, has been refining his own art form over the past few years as an advocate for natural wildfire recovery and fire-safe communities.

He started setting remote cameras in burned forests after the 2017 Eagle Creek Fire in the Columbia River Gorge with a goal of changing how people think about the effects of wildfire.

A person wearing outdoor gear crouches in a burned forest and holds a camera.

Ralph Bloemers checks a time-lapse camera that is documenting a parcel of woods in Elkhorn, Feb. 26, 2021. Bloemers has been documenting the environmental recovery of areas hit by wildfires, such as following the Santiam and Beachie Creek fires, and wildfires in the Columbia Gorge.

Kristyna Wentz-Graff / OPB

“You can show the plants coming back, and the elk and the deer and bear and the cougar and everything else that loves that highly burned landscape after it starts to regrow,” Bloemers said. “And just by showing that to people, it’s kind of undeniable the beauty and life that can be found there.”

After years of experimenting with time lapse and motion sensors, losing cameras in the snow and finding them knocked down by bears, Bloemers now has an impressive sizzle reel of cougars, bobcats, bears and majestic elk amid scorched trees. He also has time lapse photos of wildflowers, ferns and maple trees sprouting with vibrant colors in blackened landscapes.

He’s expanded his operation, too, so he now has dozens of cameras in burned forests across Oregon. He maintains cameras on Mount Hood, where the Dollar Lake Fire burned in 2011, in the Santiam Canyon and Willamette National Forest where the Beachie Creek Fire burned last year, and in the Siskiyou Mountains of Southern Oregon in the footprints of the 2017 Abney and Burnt Peak fires and the 2018 Spencer Fire.

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“I knew these places weren’t destroyed despite what people were saying about them,” Bloemers said. “I wanted to capture the wildlife that was there and the rebirth, the recovery of the natural landscape. Instead of telling people that they’re OK, I wanted to show them.”

A black-and-white image of a cougar staring directly at the camera.

A remote video camera with a motion sensor captures a female cougar and kits in a part of the Columbia River Gorge that burned in the 2017 Eagle Creek Fire.

Courtesy of Ralph Bloemers

Oregon State University ecosystems ecologist Boone Kauffman studies the effects of natural disturbances such as wildfire, and his research about the role of wildfires in Northwest forests explains a lot of the images Bloemers has captured on his cameras.

“Virtually all species, whether they’re fungus like mushrooms or plants or birds, they all have adaptations to survive fire or to live at some level of the succession from the first years following fire to old growth, hundreds of years following fire,” Kauffman said.

Douglas fir, for example, has a very thick bark that often protects it from fire, he said, and when trees die in fires, they feed insects that woodpeckers love to eat.

“We see this pretty beautiful cycle of life,” Kauffman said. “It may look horrible to us in the first few months or years after fire, but in the long run they’re providing very integral features to the structure, function and dynamics of these ecosystems.”

During a fire, Kauffman said, most species survive by running or flying away or hiding under water or soil.

“Even in very, very severe conditions, just a few inches of soil will provide enough insulation for many species to survive,” he said. “Usually there is pretty low mortality of wildlife during fires because they’ve evolved and adapted to fire as well.”

Some species even depend on fire, Kauffman added.

“There’s a number of species that only exist right after a fire, that produce seeds that will lay dormant in a forest for as long as 250 years,” Kauffman said. “And it requires fire, heat from a fire, to stimulate germination of the seed.”

Even the most severe fires typically burn less than 10% of the forest biomass above ground, his research shows, and while a fire might kill trees it doesn’t burn much of the wood, which can go on to store carbon and provide valuable salmon habitat in streams.

“One of the classic features of Pacific Northwest streams is tremendous quantities of large woody debris in the streams,” he said. “A lot of the gravels and sands that ultimately end up in the rivers and creeks are from these fire events, and so they can be very important sources of sediment that in the long run is utilized by species such as salmon.”

Bloemers said he hopes people will see the beauty in his post-wildfire photography and start enjoying burned forests in new ways.

“I hope they will see it not as a destroyed thing but a young thing full of potential,” Bloemers said. “It’s like a charcoal forest. It’s black and gray and brown in the beginning, but it’s basically a blank canvas that nature will start to paint green, and the wildlife will come back.”

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