Characterizing crown fuel distribution for conifers in the interior western United States

Author:

Ex Seth1,Smith Frederick W.1,Keyser Tara L.2

Affiliation:

1. Colorado State University, Department of Forest and Rangeland Stewardship, 1472 Campus Delivery, Fort Collins, CO 80523-1472, USA.

2. USDA Forest Service, Southern Research Station, 1577 Brevard Rd., Asheville, NC 28806, USA.

Abstract

Canopy fire hazard evaluation is essential for prioritizing fuel treatments and for assessing potential risk to firefighters during suppression activities. Fire hazard is usually expressed as predicted potential fire behavior, which is sensitive to the methodology used to quantitatively describe fuel profiles: methodologies that assume that fuel is distributed uniformly throughout crowns have been shown to predict less severe fire behavior than those that assume more realistic nonuniform fuel distributions. We used crown fuel data from seven interior western United States conifer species to characterize within-crown fuel distributions. Fuel was shifted upward and concentrated in crowns in crowded stands compared with crowns in open stands, which suggests that the vertical distribution of fuel is shaped by foliage concentration in favorable light environments near the top of crowns and echoes the predictable relationship between crown ratio and stand density. However, unlike crown ratio, the relationship between within-crown foliage distribution and stand density was independent of the shade tolerance of a species. This implies that there is a general relationship between stand density and within-crown fuel distribution for conifers and that species differences in fuel profiles related to shade tolerance are expressed primarily in the relationship between stand density and crown ratio.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Ecology,Forestry,Global and Planetary Change

Reference31 articles.

1. Conifer Crown Fuel Modeling: Current Limits and Potential for Improvement

2. Bradshaw, L.S., Deeming, J.E., Burgan, R.E., and Cohen, J.D. 1983. The 1978 national fire-danger rating system: technical documentation. USDA Forest Service, Intermountain Forest and Range Experiment Station, Ogden, Utah, General Technical Report, GTR-INT-169.

3. Effects of thinning and nitrogen fertilization on branch and foliage production in Douglas-fir

4. Burns, R.M., and Honkala, B.H. 1990. Silvics of North America: 1. Conifers; 2. Hardwoods. USDA Forest Service, Washington, D.C.

5. Aerial and Surface Fuel Consumption in Crown Fires

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