Author:
Sandberg David V.,Ottmar Roger D.,Cushon Geoffrey H.
Abstract
This paper was presented at the conference ‘Integrating spatial technologies and ecological principles for a new age in fire management’, Boise, Idaho, USA, June 1999
The ongoing development of sophisticated fire behavior and effects models has
demonstrated the need for a comprehensive system of fuel classification that
more accurately captures the structural complexity and geographic diversity of
fuelbeds. The Fire and Environmental Research Applications Team (FERA) of the
USDA Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station, is developing a
national system of fuel characteristic classification (FCC). The system is
designed to accommodate researchers and managers operating at a variety of
scales, and who have access to a variety of kinds of input data. Users can
generate fuel characteristics by accessing existing fuelbed descriptions
(fuelbed prototypes) using generic information such as cover type or
vegetation form. Fuelbed prototypes will provide the best available
predictions of the kind, quality and abundance of fuels. Users can accept
these default settings or modify some or all of them using more detailed
information about vegetation structure and fuel biomass. When the user has
completed editing the fuelbed data, the FCC system calculates or infers
quantitative fuel characteristics (physical, chemical, and structural
properties) and probable fire parameters specific to that fuelbed. Each
user-described fuelbed is also assigned to one of approximately 192 stylized
fuel characteristic classes.
Cited by
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