“…For example, Taylor and Solem (2001) and Taylor (2000) estimated presettlement (1735-1849), settlement , and fire-suppression fire rotations of 76, 117, and 577 years, respectively, in red fir and other upper montane forests in the southern Cascades. The absence of fire over the past century has also increased the backlog of red fir forests that require fire for ecological benefits (e.g., surface fuels reduction, increased biodiversity and structural heterogeneity), as indicated by an increase in fire return interval departure (FRID) values in these forests (Caprio and Graber 2000, North et al 2012, Meyer et al 2019. However, most Sierra Nevada red fir forests have missed only one to three fire cycles (i.e., mostly low to moderate FRIDs), suggesting that the ecological effects of fire suppression in these forests are not as extreme as in the fire-frequent mixed-conifer and yellow pine forests (Miller and Safford 2012, North 2014, Safford and Van de Water 2014, van Wagtendonk et al 2002.…”