One of the most important cockroaches in the introduction is the northern birch (Colinus virgianus) whose population is currently decreasing. The cockroach population is characterized by the population fluctuation of "prosperity or depression", but short-term changes do not represent long-term trends. The long-term trend shows that the number of plutonium has decreased since the 1950s. (Stevens, 2013) Number, quality and availability of food and nesting areas affect population levels. (Yarrow, 2009) Use of fire is an important and effective tool for managing and preserving cockroaches in the United States.
For wildlife habitat management it is strongly recommended to use specific incineration where torches, short leaves, long leaves or slash pines are the major excess species. For normal fires, subforest species that require more open habitats are preferred. The mosaic of the burning part and the burning part tends to maximize the "edge effect", which promotes many different wildlife populations. Deer, pigeons, donkeys and turkeys are game species that benefit from the prescribed fire. Preference of some endangered species habitat including Florida leopard, hamster tortoise, indigo snake, red woodpecker is also burning and strengthened. The burning wildlife's benefit is very big. For example, to promote the production of fruits and seeds. The improvement of yield and quality is obtained from pasture ground, beans, hardwood sprouts. Opening for feeding, moving, dust
For habitat management of wildlife, torches, short leaves, long leaves, or slash pine are the main topics, extinguishing agents are strongly recommended. Regular fire often helps provide story stories that browse wildlife. Deer, pigeons, donkeys, turkeys are the species that benefit from prescribed fires.
Fire management officials in the wasteland use predetermined fires to protect the habitats. This seems counterintuitive, but the prescribed fires have some important functions; they restrict fuel, restore important habitats and maintain current healthy habitat Reduce the risk of devastating forest fires by helping to. Fire managers initiate control fires at habitats that rely on fires that consist of plants and wildlife adapted to the daily natural fire cycle. Fire managers cautiously choose when to burn depending on the weather and vegetation conditions, many of the designated fires are low in strength and moving slowly, so wild animals leave the surroundings or evacuate the evacuation area You can secure safety by finding it. Some species use caverns to avoid the front of the flames passing through the grassland quickly, others some evacuate trees.