KNP Complex Fire reaches part of Sequoia National Park’s Giant Forest, threatening some of the world’s largest trees
By Dakin Andone, CNN
The KNP Complex Fire in California has reached a "small area" of the Giant Forest in Sequoia National Park, home to some of the world's largest trees, according to fire officials.
The blaze, which has scorched 21,777 acres, reached the Four Guardsmen area, where officials spent recent days preparing the trees for the threat of fire, per an update Saturday on InciWeb, a national clearinghouse for wildfire information.
The base of the General Sherman tree, the world's largest by volume, had been wrapped in an aluminum-based burn-resistant material. But the tree was not impacted by fire on Saturday, the update said.
The KNP Complex Fire was 0% contained as of Saturday. Fire officials expected winds to pick up in the area Sunday, prompting a red flag warning that will remain in effect through the day.
"Crews are preparing for changes and possible significant increases in fire activity," the update Saturday said.
There are 416 personnel across 10 crews battling the fire, which was initially made up of three separate fires ignited by lightning earlier this month, according to the National Park Service. One of those was 100% contained, but two -- the Paradise Fire and Colony Fire -- merged Friday and will now be considered a single fire, per InciWeb.
Sequoia National Park has been closed to the public, the update said, and while King Canyon National Park is still open, air quality has been significantly impacted by the fire.
Sequoias only naturally grow across the western slopes of the southern Sierra Nevada mountain range in California. They can grow to be more than 200 feet tall and live more than 3,000 years.
Last year, between 7,500 and 10,600 mature giant sequoias were destroyed in the Castle Fire -- about 10 to 14% of the world's population of mature sequoias -- according to a report by the National Park Service published in June.
Officials last week were working to mitigate the treat of the fire. But this time the wildfire is burning in places where the National Park Service has no history of fires ever burning, a park official told CNN, meaning there's a lot of overgrowth that could fuel the burn.
"We basically told the fire crews to treat all our special sequoias like they were buildings and wrap them all up, and rake all the litter away and roll away the heavy logs," said Christy Brigham, chief of resource management and science for the Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks.
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Jon Passantino, Deanna Hackney, Stephanie Elam, Christina Maxouris and Alisha Ebrahimji contributed to this report.