Studying the effects of fuel treatment based on burn probability on a boreal forest landscape

被引:15
|
作者
Liu, Zhihua [1 ]
Yang, Jian [1 ]
He, Hong S. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Chinese Acad Sci, State Key Lab Forest & Soil Ecol, Inst Appl Ecol, Shenyang 110164, Peoples R China
[2] Univ Missouri, Sch Nat Resources, Columbia, MO 65211 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Burn probability; Fire; Fuel treatment; LANDIS; Northeast China; POTENTIAL FIRE BEHAVIOR; MANAGEMENT ALTERNATIVES; SPATIALLY EXPLICIT; TEMPORAL PATTERNS; SIMULATION; MODEL; RISK; SUCCESSION; DYNAMICS; DISTURBANCE;
D O I
10.1016/j.jenvman.2012.11.004
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Fuel treatment is assumed to be a primary tactic to mitigate intense and damaging wildfires. However, how to place treatment units across a landscape and assess its effectiveness is difficult for landscape-scale fuel management planning. In this study, we used a spatially explicit simulation model (LANDIS) to conduct wildfire risk assessments and optimize the placement of fuel treatments at the landscape scale. We first calculated a baseline burn probability map from empirical data (fuel, topography, weather, and fire ignition and size data) to assess fire risk. We then prioritized landscape-scale fuel treatment based on maps of burn probability and fuel loads (calculated from the interactions among tree composition, stand age, and disturbance history), and compared their effects on reducing fire risk. The burn probability map described the likelihood of burning on a given location; the fuel load map described the probability that a high fuel load will accumulate on a given location. Fuel treatment based on the burn probability map specified that stands with high burn probability be treated first, while fuel treatment based on the fuel load map specified that stands with high fuel loads be treated first. Our results indicated that fuel treatment based on burn probability greatly reduced the burned area and number of fires of different intensities. Fuel treatment based on burn probability also produced more dispersed and smaller high-risk fire patches and therefore can improve efficiency of subsequent fire suppression. The strength of our approach is that more model components (e.g., succession, fuel, and harvest) can be linked into LANDIS to map the spatially explicit wildfire risk and its dynamics to fuel management, vegetation dynamics, and harvesting. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:42 / 52
页数:11
相关论文
共 22 条
  • [1] Contributions of Ignitions, Fuels, and Weather to the Spatial Patterns of Burn Probability of a Boreal Landscape
    Parisien, Marc-Andre
    Parks, Sean A.
    Miller, Carol
    Krawchuk, Meg A.
    Heathcott, Mark
    Moritz, Max A.
    ECOSYSTEMS, 2011, 14 (07) : 1141 - 1155
  • [2] Contributions of Ignitions, Fuels, and Weather to the Spatial Patterns of Burn Probability of a Boreal Landscape
    Marc-André Parisien
    Sean A. Parks
    Carol Miller
    Meg A. Krawchuk
    Mark Heathcott
    Max A. Moritz
    Ecosystems, 2011, 14 : 1141 - 1155
  • [3] Comparing Effects of Climate Warming, Fire, and Timber Harvesting on a Boreal Forest Landscape in Northeastern China
    Li, Xiaona
    He, Hong S.
    Wu, Zhiwei
    Liang, Yu
    Schneiderman, Jeffrey E.
    PLOS ONE, 2013, 8 (04):
  • [4] Burn severity and soil chemistry are weak drivers of early vegetation succession following a boreal mega-fire in a production forest landscape
    Gustafsson, Lena
    Granath, Gustaf
    Nohrstedt, Hans-Orjan
    Leverkus, Alexandro B.
    Johansson, Victor
    JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE, 2021, 32 (01)
  • [5] Impacts of different forest fire management policies and fuel treatment models on forest fire risk in boreal forest of China
    Hu, Tongxin
    Xu, Zibo
    Yu, Cheng
    Dou, Xu
    Zhang, Yujing
    Sun, Long
    ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS, 2024, 169
  • [6] Emulating natural fire effects using harvesting in an eastern boreal forest landscape of northeast China
    Liu, Zhihua
    He, Hong S.
    Yang, Jian
    JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE, 2012, 23 (04) : 782 - 795
  • [7] Comparing fuel reduction treatments for reducing wildfire size and intensity in a boreal forest landscape of northeastern China
    Wu, Zhiwei
    He, Hong S.
    Liu, Zhihua
    Liang, Yu
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2013, 454 : 30 - 39
  • [8] Evaluations on the Consequences of Fire Suppression and the Ecological Effects of Fuel Treatment Scenarios in a Boreal Forest of the Great Xing'an Mountains, China
    He, Han
    Chang, Yu
    Liu, Zhihua
    Xiong, Zaiping
    Zhao, Lujia
    FORESTS, 2023, 14 (01):
  • [9] Effects of Forest Fire Prevention Policies on Probability and Drivers of Forest Fires in the Boreal Forests of China during Different Periods
    Zhou, Qing
    Zhang, Heng
    Wu, Zhiwei
    REMOTE SENSING, 2022, 14 (22)
  • [10] Effects of 80 years of forest management on landscape structure and pattern in the eastern Canadian boreal forest
    Boucher, Dominique
    De Grandpre, Louis
    Kneeshaw, Daniel
    St-Onge, Benoit
    Ruel, Jean-Claude
    Waldron, Kaysandra
    Lussier, Jean-Martin
    LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY, 2015, 30 (10) : 1913 - 1929