A fire regime risk management tool

被引:0
|
作者
Penman, T. D. [1 ]
Ababei, D. [1 ]
Chong, D. M. O. [1 ]
Duff, T. J. [1 ]
Tolhurst, K. G. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Melbourne, Sch Ecosyst & Forest Sci, Creswick, Vic 3363, Australia
关键词
Risk management; fire management; trade-off; Bayesian Networks; assets; FUEL TREATMENT; NORTHERN-TERRITORY; VERTEBRATE FAUNA; CARBON STOCKS; WATER YIELD; FOREST; VEGETATION; WILDFIRE; SIMULATION; SPREAD;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
TP39 [计算机的应用];
学科分类号
081203 ; 0835 ;
摘要
Wildfires can cause significant damage to people, property and the environment. For example, the 2009 Black Saturday Fires resulted in the loss of 173 lives and over 2000 houses. These fires affected large areas of natural forest with a high value to society, in particular as catchments that provide Melbourne with drinking water and the habitat of threatened biodiversity. While these fires were the most destructive in human terms, the quantification of the existing and future risk posed from wildfire to multiple assets requires consideration of the total fire regime over a multi-decadal scale (Penman et al. 2014) and not just single events. Fire regimes are the spatial expression of area burned over multiple years which includes consideration of fire frequency, intensity, heterogeneity and seasonality (Gill 1975; Whelan 1995). Fire management agencies seek to alter the fire regime to reduce risk to all assets however no actions universally reduce risk to all asset types. For example, fuel treatments are commonly used to reduce risk to people and property, but this can be to the detriment of environmental assets (Penman et al. 2011a). The challenge is therefore to develop management strategies that simultaneously satisfy the gamut of management objectives (Driscoll et al. 2010). Here we present a new fire regime tool which builds on the PHOENIX RapidFire Fire Behaviour Simulator, hereafter PHOENIX. PHOENIX simulates fire behaviour based on empirically derived models for a range of environments based on fuel loads, topography and weather. The fire regime tool provides a novel simulation approach to quantify the risk to houses, ecological assets, water and carbon posed by natural and anthropogenic fire regimes. In doing so, the model allows for comparison of risk to assets over a range of realistic fuel management strategies across a landscape, as well as basic suppression responses.
引用
收藏
页码:270 / 276
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Regional fire scenarios in Spain: Linking landscape dynamics and fire regime for wildfire risk management
    Montiel Molina, Cristina
    Karlsson Martin, Oskar
    Galiana Martin, Luis
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 2019, 233 : 427 - 439
  • [2] Evaluating a Fire Management Plan for Fire Regime Goals in a Florida Landscape
    Menges, Eric S.
    Main, Kevin N.
    Pickert, Roberta L.
    Ewing, Kye
    NATURAL AREAS JOURNAL, 2017, 37 (02) : 212 - 227
  • [3] Demarcation of Forest Fire Risk Zones in Silent Valley National Park and the Effectiveness of Forest Management Regime
    Amrutha, K.
    Danumah, Jean Homian
    Nikhil, S.
    Saha, Sunil
    Rajaneesh, A.
    Mammen, Pratheesh C.
    Ajin, R. S.
    Kuriakose, Sekhar L.
    JOURNAL OF GEOVISUALIZATION AND SPATIAL ANALYSIS, 2022, 6 (01)
  • [4] Demarcation of Forest Fire Risk Zones in Silent Valley National Park and the Effectiveness of Forest Management Regime
    K. Amrutha
    Jean Homian Danumah
    S. Nikhil
    Sunil Saha
    A. Rajaneesh
    Pratheesh C. Mammen
    R. S. Ajin
    Sekhar L. Kuriakose
    Journal of Geovisualization and Spatial Analysis, 2022, 6
  • [5] Fire risk and on-line risk management
    Durling, RL
    Fleming, KN
    True, DE
    Zee, KL
    Hackerott, HA
    PSAM 5: PROBABILISTIC SAFETY ASSESSMENT AND MANAGEMENT, VOLS 1-4, 2000, (34): : 1131 - 1136
  • [6] Wildland fire risk assessment system: A new tool for fire prevention
    Smith, Jim
    Forest Landowner, 2004, 63 (01): : 44 - 46
  • [7] Fire regime in a Mexican forest under indigenous resource management
    Fule, Peter Z.
    Ramos-Gomez, Mauro
    Cortes-Montano, Citlali
    Miller, Andrew M.
    ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS, 2011, 21 (03) : 764 - 775
  • [8] The risk management system, a tool in occupational risk management
    Angulo Espinosa, Sandra Isabel
    REVISTA CES SALUD PUBLICA, 2012, 3 (02): : 127 - 128
  • [9] Fire regime in the Brazilian Savanna: Recent changes, policy and management
    Schmidt, Isabel Belloni
    Eloy, Ludivine
    FLORA, 2020, 268
  • [10] Vegetation management with fire modifies peatland soil thermal regime
    Brown, Lee E.
    Palmer, Sheila M.
    Johnston, Kerrylyn
    Holden, Joseph
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 2015, 154 : 166 - 176