Prescribed Fire Use Among Black Landowners in the Red Hills Region, USA

  • La' Portia J. Perkins Department of Forest Resources and Environmental Conservation, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, USA.
  • T. Adam Coates Department of Forest Resources and Environmental Conservation, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, USA. https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7628-0035
  • J. Kevin Hiers Natural Resources Institute, Texas A&M University, College Station, USA.
  • Cynthia T. Fowler Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Wofford College, Spartanburg, USA.
  • Seth W. Bigelow Tall Timbers Research, Tallahassee, USA.
Keywords: Discrimination, Heirs’ property, Longleaf pine, Southeastern US, Tenant

Abstract

The Red Hills Region of southern Alabama, northern Florida, and southwestern Georgia is one of the most prominent areas in the United States for conducting prescribed fire research and is the birthplace of fire ecology. The culture of prescribed burning in the Red Hills has been influenced by multiple ethnic groups, including the Seminole and Creek nations, Black landowners, and White researchers. Given the distinctive reliance of the region on prescribed fire, it is noteworthy that the combined issues of Black land loss, underrepresentation, and incentives for using prescribed fire on private lands in the southeastern United States have generated questions about diversity and inclusion in landowner outreach. To increase understanding about Black landowner historic and current use of prescribed fire for land management in the Red Hills Region, formal and informal interviews were conducted from May through August 2019 with 21 Black landowners and tenants to document the perspectives and thoughts of Black landowners and tenants of southern Alabama, northern Florida, and southwestern Georgia. The results of this research show that Black landowners, tenants, and fire experts, have been, and continue to be, influential in the development and sustainment of fire traditions in the Red Hills and in the resilience of the longleaf pine ecosystem.

Author Biographies

La' Portia J. Perkins, Department of Forest Resources and Environmental Conservation, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, USA.

La' Portia J. Perkins (B.S., Clemson University; M.S., Virginia Tech) is a Florida-born and Virginia-raised wildlife/forester, social scientist, artist, and poet. Her work centers on the African-diasporic experience with land management and nature in the Southeast and a focus on storytelling and connection.

T. Adam Coates, Department of Forest Resources and Environmental Conservation, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, USA.

Adam Coates, Ph.D., is an Assistant Professor of Forest Fire Ecology and Management in the Department of Forest Resources and Environmental Conservation at Virginia Tech in Blacksburg, Virginia. 

J. Kevin Hiers, Natural Resources Institute, Texas A&M University, College Station, USA.

J. Kevin Hiers is a program manager for Texas A&M University’s Natural Resources Institute where he supports the Strategic Environmental Research and Development Program’s Resource Conservation and Resilience research portfolio. 

Cynthia T. Fowler, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Wofford College, Spartanburg, USA.

Cynthia "Cissy" Fowler is Chair of the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at Wofford College in Spartanburg, SC. She is a co-founder and former editor of Ethnobiology Letters and currently serves as a co-editor of Contributions in Ethnobiology.

Seth W. Bigelow, Tall Timbers Research, Tallahassee, USA.

Seth W. Bigelow, Ph.D., is acting Director of Fire Science Applications at Tall Timbers Research Station and Land Conservancy in Tallahassee, FL.

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Published
2023-08-04
How to Cite
Perkins, L. P. J., Coates, T. A., Hiers, J. K., Fowler, C. T., & Bigelow, S. W. (2023). Prescribed Fire Use Among Black Landowners in the Red Hills Region, USA. Ethnobiology Letters, 14(1), 36-48. https://doi.org/10.14237/ebl.14.1.2023.1855
Section
Perspectives