Forest treatments such as prescribed burns, mastication, and thinning are widely implemented across the western USA to reduce fuels and enhance wildfire resilience. These practices also influence snow accumulation and melt, which, in turn, affect snow storage and duration. Since many regions depend on seasonal snow for water resources, it is essential that forest management practices preserve or even enhance snow storage as a buffer against the impacts of climate change. To test the hypothesis that thinning and canopy gap creation can maximize snow storage, particularly on north-facing slopes, experimental forest treatments representing a range of thinning intensities were implemented on Cle Elum Ridge in the headwaters of the Yakima River Basin, Washington, USA. Ground-based snow observations, combined with pre-treatment (2021) and post-treatment (2023) snow-on lidar, show that canopy thinning increased snow depth and storage by 30% on north-facing slopes and by 16% on south-facing slopes. Snow depth was positively related to canopy openness, as measured by sky view fraction and canopy edge metrics, with stronger effects on north-facing slopes. In contrast, there was no clear relationship between snow depth and degree of thinning as measured by forest basal area, a common forestry metric used to plan treatment prescriptions. Using canopy edge metrics and sky view fraction relationships, we estimated the hydrologic benefit of thinning during 2023 at 12.3 acre-feet of water storage per 100 acres of north-facing forest and 5.1 acre-feet on south-facing slopes. These findings highlight the potential to incorporate hydrologic resilience as a co-benefit when planning fuel reduction strategies.
Lumbrazo C, Howe ER, Dickerson-Lange SE, Pestana S, Cramblitt J, Dedinsky K, Smith K and Lundquist JD (2026) Can we maximize snow storage through fire-resilient forest treatments? Insights from experimental forest treatments in the Eastern Cascades, WA, USA. Front. For. Glob. Change 8:1707812. doi: 10.3389/ffgc.2025.1707812