12/03/2025
“I was four years old in this picture,” says Lenya Quinn-Davidson. “I grew up in a town called Hayfork, which is surrounded by the Shasta Trinity National Forest and just very, very fire prone. I was actually pretty scared of fire.”
After arriving at UC Berkeley’s Rausser College of Natural Resources, Quinn-Davidson (BS ’04, Conservation and Resource Studies) started to see fire differently.
Family stories and Berkeley professors shaped her path to fire ecology. “I’m third generation at UC Berkeley. Cal was a big part of our childhood.”
Today she’s the Director of the University of California Agriculture and Natural Resources Fire Network — but it was at Berkeley where it first clicked for her that fire is a natural and needed process.
She found mentors like the late Professor Don Dahlsten, an entomologist known for his field-trip classes, and Scott Stephens, a fire scientist who “shaped how I thought about fire” and remains a close collaborator. She built an interdisciplinary major and mentality that “started at Berkeley” and serves her well today.
Her work now is about people and policy as much as it is science. “Our fire problems are really at their heart social problems,” she says. The fix? “Engagement. Reconnecting people with place. It’s always been a human practice.”
She’s created a social movement around prescribed fire, connecting local burn associations, tribes, agencies, and legislators. Her work has resulted in the state’s first Prescribed Burn Associations, two senate bills that ease liability for cultural burners and prescribed fire practitioners, and an expansion of the Women's Prescribed Fire Training Exchange, a global training program that brings more voices and perspectives into the field.
“At the end of the day, it’s about joy and connection. Fire is part of California. Every place we love has a fire story, and we can help shape what that looks like.”
Her advice for the next generation of changemakers? “Always question the things you think you know. Don’t believe everything you think.”