We've moved!
Information about regional FLN networks and landscapes is now at https://firenetworks.org/fln-where-we-work/.
Fire Learning Network landscapes are typically large—the median size is 1.6 million acres—and engage multiple ownerships and numerous stakeholders. Landscapes coalesce around locally-identified threats such as fire exclusion or invasive species, and focus on ecologically and culturally appropriate restoration. Partners—federal, state, local and tribal governments, private landowners and other community members—define their own landscape boundaries, priorities and solutions.
The FLN is currently active in regional networks and landscapes that together encompass nearly 75 million acres, in a wide range of ecosystems and human contexts from coast to coast:
- Blackfoot Valley (MT)
- California Klamath-Siskiyou
- Central Appalachians (KY, MD, PA, VA, WV)
- Colorado-New Mexico Borderlands Initiative
- FireScape Mendocino (CA)
- Great Plains (IA, NE)
- Island Park Sustainable Fire Community (ID, MT)
- New Mexico (Rio Grande Water Fund and Burned Area Learning Network)
- Northern Colorado Fireshed Coalition
- Oregon
- Sand Plains Partnership (MN)
- South Central (AR, OK)
- Southern Blue Ridge (GA, NC, SC, TN)
- Washington Dry Forests (see the storymap)
- Western Klamath Mountains (CA) (see the Western Klamath Restoration Partnership)