Christopher Roos: We need a new Smokey Bear that embraces good fire (2024)

On Friday, the Department of Agriculture’s Forest Service and other federal agencies will celebrate the 80th birthday of the most potent symbol of America’s wildfire issues — Smokey Bear. Born from a public service advertising campaign, Smokey has achieved his pop culture apogee by association with Bambi in the Disney animation multiverse since the 1960s.

Smokey was at his most effective when convincing Americans that wildfires were bad, that nearly all of them were our fault and that, by our own actions, we could choose to live without wildfire. These attitudes are pervasive in American culture today, but they fail to recognize the long history of humans and good fire, as illustrated so clearly in the beneficial practices of many American Indigenous communities.

Humans have a deep history with wildfire that was positive and productive. Our earliest human ancestors evolved on the tropical savannas of eastern and southern Africa more than 5 million years ago. Tropical savannas are the most flammable biome on the planet, burning as often as twice per year. African archaeological sites also indicate domestic uses of fire by more than 1 million years ago, although the ability to start fires may not have emerged until less than400,000 years ago. This means that prior to this time, human ancestors were dependent on natural wildfires to obtain burning plant material to start their own fires.

But our ancestral relationship to wildfire may long predate our capture of fire for domestic uses. Anthropologists studying a population ofsavanna chimpanzees — our evolutionary cousins — have shown that these apes are apparently unafraid of fire and actively forage for food in recently burned savanna. Anatomical changes in our ancestors around 2 million years ago — particularly in the shrinking of our teeth and guts coupled with bigger brains — had long led to speculation that cooked foodhad led to this biological revolution.

The absence of archaeological evidence for fire use at that time had shed doubt on this scenario until the savanna chimpanzee research; a clever hypothesis was derived from this work. Dubbed the Pyrophilic Primate Hypothesis (in other words, the “fire-loving ape” hypothesis), this model suggests that by foraging in recently burned savannas, our ancestors would have come across inadvertently cooked food — small animals, roots and tubers. It is a remarkable fact that apes prefer cooked food, so it takes only a small leap to hypothesize that our ancestors would have helped to facilitate savanna burning by moving burning fuels to start new savanna fires and increase the likelihood of encountering inadvertently cooked food. This is not an unrealistic cognitive leap. There are at leastthree species of birds that do precisely this in the tropical savannas of Australia — they grab burning twigs to start new fires so they can hunt along the new fire front.

It is often exceedingly difficult to identify human influences on landscape fire histories, particularly in landscapes that have abundant natural, lightning-started fire. Nevertheless, archaeologists have accumulated evidence thatMiddle Stone Age humansin east Africa and Middle PaleolithicNeanderthals in Germanyused fire to manipulate vegetation in their surrounding environments more than 90,000 years ago. It is highly likely that human ancestors continued using fire as a land management tool ever since, including since their expansion into the Americas in the last 25,000 years.

In North America, Indigenous populations used fire for myriad purposes to shape and manage their environment to make it easier to travel and hunt, to make certain plants more abundant, as part of their farming strategies, or to reduce fire hazard among other goals. Tree ring studies have shown that Indigenous cultural burning led to forests that were less vulnerable to climate-driven wildfires. Today, vibrant programs of cultural burning are being led by Indigenous people in Californiaand westernCanada, and The Nature Conservancy hosts the Indigenous People Burning Networkto support knowledge exchanges among aspiring fire practitioners in Indigenous communities.

Although lightning remained a potent source for igniting wildfires, the removal of Indigenous people from much of their homelands in the 19th century likely changed wildfire patterns, which were changed further still when settlers brought livestock, farming and logging to those Native lands. A paternalistic and colonial conservation movement then led to official efforts to remove fire from all wildlands, paving the way for the wildly successful Smokey Bear campaign.

By the 1970s, federal agencies starting with the National Park Service began to recognize their mistake — fire was essential for the health of many landscapes in the U.S. Today, the National Cohesive Wildfire Management Strategy calls for an increase in “proactive use of fire” in recognition of the benefits of good fire. But still, Smokey Bear with his message that fire is something that we can live without persists into a ninth decade. As a meme, Smokey Bear has usurped the place for any other American cultural values associated with fire. Instead of having cultural values for the benefits that responsible fire can offer, we have only negative cultural values for fire as an avoidable hazard — we have only Smokey Bear. This is a sharp contrast with our deep history with wildfire.

Christopher Roos: We need a new Smokey Bear that embraces good fire (1)

If we are going to learn to live with wildfires, then we need to find a way past Smokey’s message to build new positive cultural values for good fire. Rather than reject Smokey entirely, we need a new Smokey Bear that popularizes the benefits of fire for our forests and our communities living in flammable forests — a Smokey Bear that embraces our 2 million-year history of fire. Given the goals of the National Cohesive Wildfire Management Strategy, Congress and the U.S. Forest service should make public messaging a major emphasis to change American cultural values around fire.

Who better to facilitate this than the widely popular symbol for wildfire — Smokey Bear?

Christopher Roos is an environmental archaeologist and professor of anthropology at Southern Methodist University in Dallas. In the past 20 years, he has led or contributed to interdisciplinary research on historical fire management by Indigenous communities in Arizona,New Mexico,Montana,FijiandAustralia.

Submit a letter, of no more than 400 words, to the editor here or email letters@chicagotribune.com.

Christopher Roos: We need a new Smokey Bear that embraces good fire (2024)

FAQs

What is Smokey the Bear's message? ›

Smokey's original catchphrase was "Smokey Says – Care Will Prevent 9 out of 10 Forest Fires." In 1947, it became "Remember... Only YOU Can Prevent Forest Fires." In 2001, it was again updated to its current version of "Only You Can Prevent Wildfires" in response to a massive outbreak of wildfires in natural areas other ...

What is the new slogan for Smokey the Bear? ›

This is one of the reasons that in 2001, Smokey Bear changed his slogan from only you can prevent forest fires to only you can prevent wildfires.

What does Smokey the Bear say about fires? ›

The first Smokey Bear PSA produced featured his original catchphrase, “Care will prevent 9 out of 10 forest fires.” By 1947, the phrase was changed to the even catchier, “Only you can prevent forest fires.” In 2001, the phrase was updated again to, “Only you can prevent wildfires,” to clarify the distinction between ...

What happened to Smokey the Bear's mascot? ›

The original Smokey died Nov. 9,1976, a year after his retirement. His remains were returned to New Mexico, where he was buried in the Smokey Bear Historical Park in Capitan, N.M., not far from where he was rescued two decades prior.

What does Smokey the Bear symbolize? ›

Smokey Bear was born on August 9, 1944, when the USDA Forest Service and the Ad Council agreed that a fictional bear named Smokey would be their symbol for forest fire prevention.

What's the story behind Smokey the Bear? ›

Smokey Bear was brought by the U.S. Forest Service from New Mexico in June of 1950 after being burned as a cub from a forest fire that swept through a portion of the Lincoln National Forest. Smokey Bear served as a living symbol of the Smokey Bear forest fire prevention program.

What is Smokey the Bear's catchphrase? ›

Smokey Bear's famous slogan, "Only you can prevent forest fires," was added in 1947 by the Wartime Advertising Council, known today as the Ad Council.

Why is Smokey the Bear controversial? ›

For much of the last century, Smokey was the pitchman for the federal government's aggressive wildfire suppression policy. That tactic, some scientists believe, may have contributed along with climate change to making American forests vulnerable long-term to combustion. They call it “the Smokey Bear effect.”

Why are they replacing Smokey the Bear? ›

The new mascot is Ember the Fox. Ember was designed and made in Canada, where the idea originated. Although Smokey is an icon of past generations, Ember's brightly colored fur and animated look are more appealing to the younger kids of today.

How old was Smokey the Bear when he died? ›

1976. NOV. 9 Smokey dies at age 26. His remains are flown back to near where he was found in New Mexico.

Why do they say fire in the bear? ›

"Fire" and "86" are common terms used in The Bear to communicate immediate orders and canceled dishes, keeping the kitchen workflow smooth. From "Family Style" meals to "Cartouche" paper lids, The Bear showcases the unique culture and camaraderie of a restaurant kitchen.

Is Smokey the Bear a girl? ›

The real-life bear

It was an American black bear cub that was rescued in 1950 from a 17,000-acre forest fire in Lincoln National Forest in south-central New Mexico. The bear climbed a tree to escape the flames, but his paws and legs got singed. They first called him Hotfoot Teddy, but later renamed him Smokey Bear.

Why did the Smokey the Bear slogan change? ›

Adams is a proponent of what she calls good fire — or burns to land that help an environment thrive. This practice is also called prescribed burning. This is one of the reasons that in 2001, Smokey Bear changed his slogan from only you can prevent forest fires to only you can prevent wildfires.

What mascot will replace Smokey the Bear? ›

It's Burnie the Bobcat, with a new slogan: Only you can decide our fiery future. “We thought, what if Smokey Bear could use a friend?” said Emily Schlickman, an assistant professor of landscape architecture and environmental design at UC Davis. “But a friend that would light fires instead of fighting them.”

Does Smokey the Bear have a name? ›

In order to maintain the correct rhythm, the writers added a "the" between "Smokey" and "Bear." As testament to the song's popularity, Smokey Bear became known as "Smokey The Bear" to many adoring fans, but in actuality his name never changed, and he is still known correctly as Smokey Bear.

What is the controversy with Smokey the Bear? ›

Smokey was created to prevent fires, and yet, in a twist, the bear and his campaign has increasingly come under scrutiny with his critics charging the message that many received, that fires are bad, may have resulted even worse blazes.

What is the objective of the Smokey Bear campaign? ›

Since 1944, Smokey Bear's wildfire prevention campaign has been singular in focus: to educate the American public on how to prevent unwanted human-caused wildfires through individual actions. Even after 80 years, his message is as important as ever, with nearly 9 out of 10 unwanted wildfires caused by humans.

What does Smokey the Bear mean in slang? ›

(also Smokey Bear, Smokey) (old-fashioned, informal) an informal US name for a member of the highway police, so called because the hats they wear in some states are similar to the one worn by Smokey the Bear.

What is the theme of the bears discover fire? ›

It's about the loss of family, community, and a connection to the wilderness. The characters stumble across bears that have discovered the “art” of sitting around a campfire together, while the people in their world have all but forgotten this.

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