KU professor leads cultural burn at Field Station

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A prescribed burn led by a KU professor at the KU Field Station Saturday morning will help ensure the area’s biodiversity and soil health in the future.

Melinda Adams, KU assistant professor, worked with Brett Ramey and MK Kerron to place the initial fire on Saturday.

Good Fire is Indigenous-led prescribed fire conducted with the goal of ecological, cultural and social restoration, according to Adams, N’dee San Carlos Apache.

In cultural burns, participants use hand tools to guide the fire, observe how the plants are responding to the fire and avoid putting fuel, such as propane, into the plants.

These cultural fires repair degraded soil and increase biodiversity while reducing the overgrowth that contributes to uncontrolled fires. Cultural burns don’t harm native plants, many of which are adapted to fire and even need fire for their seeds to germinate.

Molly Adams / Lawrence Times Sheena Parsons explains the plans for the morning’s cultural burn, Nov. 2, 2024.
Molly Adams / Lawrence Times Sheena Parsons
Molly Adams / Lawrence Times MK Kerron
Molly Adams / Lawrence Times Melinda Adams, left, and Brett Ramey place the initial fire.
Molly Adams / Lawrence Times MK Kerron uses a rake to encourage the initial fire to spread in the intended burn area.
Molly Adams / Lawrence Times Brett Ramey, left, and Melinda Adams spread fire along the perimeter of the intended burn area.
Molly Adams / Lawrence Times Fire is reflected in Kelly Nalani’s sunglasses.
Molly Adams / Lawrence Times Courtney King gathers and places fire where it is needed to encourage the intended area to burn.
Molly Adams / Lawrence Times MK Kerron, left, and Melinda Adams watch as the two edges of the growing fire come together at the end of the field burn.
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Molly Adams (she/her), photojournalist and news operations coordinator for The Lawrence Times, can be reached at molly@lawrencekstimes.com. Check out more of her work for the Times here. Check out her staff bio here.

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