Giant Sequoia Grove Health & Resilience Assessment 2026

Sequoia Creek Grove

Sequoia Creek Grove

Overview

Health & Resilience Summary

low

0.2

This grove is ranked Low for Relative Overall Vulnerability due to:

Wildfire Vulnerability

Low - 0.2

Regen Vulnerability

Low - 0.1

See the Grove Health & Resilience section below for more information.

low

0.2

This grove is ranked Low for Relative Management Priority due to:

Overall Vulnerability

Low - 0.2

Treatment Feasibility

Good - 10.0

See the Management Considerations section below for more information.

Grove Map

Grove map

Grove Map - click map for more detailed spatial information

Grove Information

PropertyValue
Grove Size (Acres)16
LocationUpper King Watershed, Tulare County
Management Unit(s)Sequoia - Kings Canyon National Park
Land Steward(s)NPS SEKI

About Sequoia Creek Grove

Sequoia Creek Grove is a 16-acre grove in the Kings River Watershed region situated between 5,473 - 6,029 feet elevation at 36.73097°N. It is managed by Sequoia National Forest/Giant Sequoia National Monument. The grove is located primarily in Kings Canyon National Park, with creekside outliers extending west into private land. It is adjacent to it's namesake, Sequoia Creek, within the Kings River watershed. Mature giant sequoias have never been logged, so it remains an old growth grove.

Sequoia Creek Grove

Health & Resilience

Sequoia Creek Grove is ranked Low for Relative Overall Vulnerability because it is at a Low risk of being negatively impacted by the effects of severe wildfire and at Low risk for inadequate natural regeneration.

Additionally, Sequoia Creek Grove is at Moderate risk for negative impacts from drought stress, Low levels of tree mortality have been detected in the grove, and the presence and activity of beetles in the grove is Unknown. 87.4% of Sequoia Creek Grove has burned in large fires since 1984. See below for more detailed information.

low

0.2

Relative Overall Vulnerability
Components of Relative Overall Vulnerability

Relative Overall Vulnerability is based on Wildfire Vulnerability and Regeneration Vulnerability using an area-weighted calculation. See Grove Assessment Analysis Methods for more details.

The pie charts below provide the percentage of the grove with high, medium, and low vulnerabilities. Click on the charts to view interactive maps of these vulnerabilities within the grove.

Additional Grove Health & Resilience Information

Below is additional information about Sequoia Creek Grove's Health & Resilience. These data, their inputs, and any available notes and updates may be found in the Grove Resilience Datasheet.

Beetle Activity
unknown

Beetle Activity in Sequoia Creek Grove has not been determined.

Please see the Grove Resilience Datasheet for details.

Drought-related Tree Mortality (all species)
low

The drought- and insect-related mortality of all tree species combined in Sequoia Creek Grove is estimated as Low according to USFS dead canopy surveys from 2017-2021. Please see Grove Assessment Analysis Methods for details.

Wildfire History

The table below provides information about large wildfires in this grove recorded since 1984. See this map of wildfires and locations of high severity fire.

MetricValue
WildfiresELLA AND AZALEA - 2009, SWALE WEST - 2014, SWALE EAST 3 - 2012
% of grove burned 87.4%
% of grove unburned 12.6%
Fire Return Interval Departure High

The chart below provides the percentages of the grove burned at different levels of severity for each wildfire since 1984.

0 - Unburned
1 - Low to Moderate Severity (<640RdNBR)
2 - High Severity (640-800RdNBR)
3 - Very High Severity (>800RdNBR)

Sequoia Creek Grove

Management Considerations

Sequoia Creek Grove is ranked Low for Relative Management Priority because it has Low Relative Overall Vulnerability and Good feasibility for implementing management actions toward restoration goals.

Additionally, the grove is 0.7 miles from a community and is 0.7 miles from recreational infrastructure. See below for more detailed information.

low

0.2

Relative Management Priority
Components of Relative Management Priority

Relative Management Priority is determined by combining the Relative Overall Vulnerability and Treatment Feasibility ranks. See Grove Assessment Analysis Methods for more details.

Relative Overall Vulnerability

Low - 0.2

See the Health & Resilience section above for the component metrics for the Relative Overall Vulnerability rank.

Treatment Feasibility

good - 10.0

FactorValue
Special Land DesignationNone
Grove Manager OpinionFuel Treatments are Possible
RemoteNo
Additional Management Considerations

Below is additional information relevant to Sequoia Creek Grove's Management Considerations. These data, their inputs, and any available notes and updates may be found in the Grove Resilience Datasheet.

Treatment History

The table below lists treatment projects in and 90 meters around this grove implemented since 2022. See this map of grove treatments.

Treatment Type % of GroveAcres
Mechanical Treatments54.3%38.1
Prescribed Fire0%0
Pile Treatments54.3%38.1
Pile Burns28.6%20.1
Replanting0%0

Management Recommendations

The table below provides an estimate of the percentage and acreage of the grove that are recommended for evaluation for treatment based on the Vulnerability Models. See this map of Grove Vulnerability Models.

Treatment Need % of GroveAcres
Fuels Reduction/Restoration0%0
Reforestation0%0

Sequoia Creek Grove

References

Find more giant sequoia science by searching the GSLC Scientific Publications Library.

Explore more groves or learn about the Giant Sequoia Lands Coalition.

Disclaimer

The information presented in the Giant Sequoia Grove Health & Resilience Assessment is intended to supplement on-the-ground knowledge of giant sequoia groves for use in conjunction with current on-the-ground knowledge of grove condition and management activities when planning fuel treatment and reforestation projects. It should not be considered the only source of information about the condition of groves.