Relative importance of fuel management, ignition management and weather for area burned: evidence from five landscape-fire-succession models

被引:92
作者
Cary, Geoffrey J. [1 ,2 ]
Flannigan, Mike D. [3 ]
Keane, Robert E. [4 ]
Bradstock, Ross A. [2 ,5 ]
Davies, Ian D. [1 ]
Lenihan, James M. [6 ]
Li, Chao [7 ]
Logan, Kimberley A. [3 ]
Parsons, Russell A. [4 ]
机构
[1] Australian Natl Univ, Coll Med Biol & Environm, Fenner Sch Environm & Soc, Canberra, ACT 0200, Australia
[2] Bushfire Cooperat Res Ctr, Melbourne, Vic 3002, Australia
[3] Canadian Forest Serv, Sault Ste Marie, ON P6A 2E5, Canada
[4] USDA Forest Serv, Rocky Mt Res Stn, Missoula Fire Sci Lab, Missoula, MT 59808 USA
[5] Dept Environm & Climate Change NSW, Hurstville, NSW 1481, Australia
[6] USDA Forest Serv, Pacific NW Res Stn, Corvallis Forestry Sci Lab, Corvallis, OR 97331 USA
[7] Canadian Forest Serv, No Forestry Ctr, Edmonton, AB T6H 3S5, Canada
关键词
CAFE; fire management; FIRESCAPE; LAMOS; LANDSUM; model comparison; SEM-LAND; simulation modelling; WILDLAND-URBAN INTERFACE; CLIMATE-CHANGE; PRESCRIBED FIRE; PATCH DYNAMICS; SIMULATION; REGIMES; SUPPRESSION; VEGETATION; STRATEGIES; REEXAMINATION;
D O I
10.1071/WF07085
中图分类号
S7 [林业];
学科分类号
0829 ; 0907 ;
摘要
The behaviour of five landscape fire models (CAFE, FIRESCAPE, LAMOS(HS), LANDSUM and SEM-LAND) was compared in a standardised modelling experiment. The importance of fuel management approach, fuel management effort, ignition management effort and weather in determining variation in area burned and number of edge pixels burned (a measure of potential impact on assets adjacent to fire-prone landscapes) was quantified for a standardised modelling landscape. Importance was measured as the proportion of variation in area or edge pixels burned explained by each factor and all interactions among them. Weather and ignition management were consistently more important for explaining variation in area burned than fuel management approach and effort, which were found to be statistically unimportant. For the number of edge pixels burned, weather and ignition management were generally more important than fuel management approach and effort. Increased ignition management effort resulted in decreased area burned in all models and decreased number of edge pixels burned in three models. The findings demonstrate that year-to-year variation in weather and the success of ignition management consistently prevail over the effects of fuel management on area burned in a range of modelled ecosystems.
引用
收藏
页码:147 / 156
页数:10
相关论文
共 48 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], AUSTR BURNING FIRE E
[2]   THE RELATIVE IMPORTANCE OF FUELS AND WEATHER ON FIRE BEHAVIOR IN SUB-ALPINE FORESTS [J].
BESSIE, WC ;
JOHNSON, EA .
ECOLOGY, 1995, 76 (03) :747-762
[3]  
Bradstock R., 2002, Flammable Australia: the fire regimes and biodiversity of a continent
[4]  
Bradstock R.A., 2001, J. Mediterran. Ecol, V2, P179
[5]   Bushfire risk at the urban interface estimated from historical weather records: consequences for the use of prescribed fire in the Sydney region of south-eastern Australia [J].
Bradstock, RA ;
Gill, AM ;
Kenny, BJ ;
Scott, J .
JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 1998, 52 (03) :259-271
[6]   The modelled effects of differing fire management strategies on the conifer Callitris verrucosa within semi-arid mallee vegetation in Australia [J].
Bradstock, RA ;
Bedward, M ;
Cohn, JS .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY, 2006, 43 (02) :281-292
[7]   Spatially-explicit simulation of the effect of prescribed burning on fire regimes and plant extinctions in shrublands typical of south-eastern Australia [J].
Bradstock, RA ;
Bedward, M ;
Kenny, BJ ;
Scott, J .
BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 1998, 86 (01) :83-95
[8]   Which mosaic? A landscape ecological approach for evaluating interactions between fire regimes, habitat and animals [J].
Bradstock, RA ;
Bedward, M ;
Gill, AM ;
Cohn, JS .
WILDLIFE RESEARCH, 2005, 32 (05) :409-423
[9]  
Bugmann HKM, 1996, CLIMATIC CHANGE, V34, P289
[10]  
Byram G.M., 1959, FOREST FIRE CONTROL, P61, DOI DOI 10.1007/S10980-016-0420-8