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FOREST FIRE CONTROL

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Title: FOREST FIRE CONTROL


1
FOREST FIRE CONTROL USE (Chapter 18)
  • Forest fire an issue because
  • Ecological/evolutionary significance
  • Economic significance
  • Threat to human life property
  • Management tool
  • Controversies surround control use decisions

2
FOREST FIRE CONTROL USE (Chapter 18)
  • Topics
  • Fire as a natural phenomenon
  • Fire as a landscape architect
  • Human impacts
  • Forest fire prevention
  • Forest fire behavior
  • Forest fire control management

3
FOREST FIRE A NATURAL PHENOMENON
  • Lightning fires common
  • 500,000 forest lightning strikes per day
  • Charcoal in lake sediments 1000s years old
  • Centuries-old redwood fire scars

4
FOREST FIRE A NATURAL PHENOMENON
  • Lightning fires vary in frequency
  • Rare in tropical rain forests
  • Uncommon in moist temperate regions
  • E.g., in eastern North America, lightning causes
    lt2 of forest fires
  • Frequent in western conifer forests
  • E.g., in Rockies, lightning causes gt60
  • Variation is due to climate, topography,
    vegetation characteristics

5
FOREST FIRE A NATURAL PHENOMENON
  • Few lightning fires become catastrophes
  • High humidity rain often accompany lightning
  • 97 burn 10 acres or less
  • Occasionally, lightning ? conflagration
  • Dry lightning can occur
  • E.g., Great Idaho Fire (1910) burned nearly 3
    million acres (4700 square miles)

6
FOREST FIRE LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT
  • Fire frequency intensity affect
  • Forest stand characteristics
  • Average age of stands in an area
  • Even-aged vs. uneven-aged
  • Early-successional vs. climax stage
  • Growth
  • Wildlife populations
  • Insect disease conditions

7
FOREST FIRE LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT
  • Crown Fires
  • Lead to even-aged forests where frequent
  • E.g., lodgepole pine in West
  • E.g., early-successional forests (aspen, jack
    pine, red pine) common in Minnesota
  • Rarer in northern hardwoods
  • 1000 years between fires
  • Thus, uneven-aged climax forests dominated
    pre-Colombian landscape

8
FOREST FIRE LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT
  • Plant species adapt to frequent fires
  • Rapid colonization early domination, e.g.
  • Light seeds for long-distance transport
  • Root sprouting (aspen)
  • Serotinous cones (lodgepole pine)
  • Seedling tolerance of dry surface conditions
    temperature extremes
  • Rapid early growth (aspen)
  • Thick bark (resistant to fire injury, e.g.,
    ponderosa pine)

9
FOREST FIRE BENEFITS
  • Forest rejuvenation and delay of climax species
    invasion
  • Wildlife habitat improvement
  • Light surface fires reduce hazardous fuel
    accumulation (which lowers risk of large
    catastrophic fires)
  • Release to soil of organic matter nutrients

10
FOREST FIRE HUMAN IMPACTS
  • Ancient peoples used fire to
  • Improve hunting
  • Ease travel
  • Clear land
  • Reduce pest populations (insects snakes)
  • E.g., shifting slash burn tropical agriculture
  • E.g., North American native peoples

11
FOREST FIRE HUMAN IMPACTS
  • 1800s little appreciation for beneficial
    effects, because fire
  • Destroyed timber resources
  • Threatened human life property
  • Thus
  • Fire suppression became predominant policy

12
FOREST FIRE HUMAN IMPACTS
  • By mid 1930s
  • Goal all wildfires suppressed ASAP
  • Little planned (prescribed) burning, except
  • Fuel reduction
  • Seedbed preparation
  • 1940s - 1960s
  • Realization labor equipment insufficient to
    suppress all wildfires (especially in West)
  • Priorities needed for fire suppression efforts

13
FOREST FIRE HUMAN IMPACTS
  • Need to prioritize ? Fire Management
  • Fire recognized as natural environmental factor
  • Undesirable fires suppressed
  • Beneficial effects of fire utilized
  • Decisions based on management objectives
  • Decisions not aimed at universal suppression

14
FOREST FIREHUMAN IMPACTS
  • Humans are primary cause of fire in most areas,
    e.g., in United States
  • Incendiarism (26 overall 40 in south)
  • Smoking (19)
  • Debris burning (18)
  • Lightning (9)
  • Machine use (8)
  • Campfires (6)

15
FOREST FIRE PREVENTION
  • Large proportion of human-caused fires ?
  • Prevention Strategy Education, e.g.
  • Smokey the Bear
  • Programs targeting incendiarism

16
FOREST FIRE PREVENTION
  • Prevention Strategy Hazard Reduction
  • Goal is to reduce
  • Fire frequency
  • Fire intensity
  • Hazard reduction activities
  • Fuel reduction
  • Prescribed burns
  • Snag removal after fire or harvest
  • Construction of barriers to fire spread

17
FOREST FIRE BEHAVIOR
  • Fire behavior is
  • Rate of spread
  • Direction of spread
  • Fire intensity
  • Fire behavior knowledge essential for
  • Decision whether or not to suppress
  • Choice/implementation of suppression strategy
  • Design/implementation of prescribed burns

18
FOREST FIRE BEHAVIOR
  • Behavior determined by three fire prerequisites
  • 1. Flammable fuels
  • 2. Heat
  • 3. Oxygen
  • These prerequisites are affected by
  • Fuel conditions
  • Weather conditions
  • Topography

19
FOREST FIRE BEHAVIOR
  • Behavior Topics
  • Types of forest fire
  • Surface fires
  • Ground fires
  • Crown Fires
  • Weather
  • Topography
  • Prediction of fire behavior

20
FOREST FIRE BEHAVIOR
  • Surface Fires
  • Burn surface fuels undecomposed litter, fallen
    logs, grasses, herbs, small woody plants
  • Rate of spread depends on amount, arrangement
    moisture content of fine fuels
  • Intensity depends on large fuels (logs)
  • Most intense in logging slash
  • More total fuel ? more difficult to control

21
FOREST FIRE BEHAVIOR
  • Ground Fires
  • Burn ground fuels (below surface) partly
    decomposed organic matter, roots, peat
  • Oxygen often limited
  • Low intensity slow spread
  • BUT persistent difficult to extinguish

22
FOREST FIRE BEHAVIOR
  • Crown Fires
  • Burn aerial fuels tree crowns subcanopy
    flammable materials
  • Common in conifers, rare in hardwoods
  • Usually begin as surface fires
  • Can blow up into conflagrations
  • Powerful convection column
  • Convection column creates its own draft
  • Embers spot far ahead of main fire
  • May be uncontrollable

23
SURFACE FIRE BECOMING CROWN FIRE LODGEPOLE
PINE EASTERN WASHINGTON
24
FOREST FIRE BEHAVIOR
  • Fire Weather Includes
  • Atmospheric moisture (relative humidity)
  • Atmospheric stability (resistance to vertical
    motion)
  • Wind

25
FOREST FIRE BEHAVIOR
  • Fire Weather
  • Atmospheric moisture (relative humidity)
  • Atmospheric humidity controls fuel moisture
  • Rate of fuel moisture response depends on fuel
    size
  • Fire energy must evaporate fuel moisture before
    burning fuel itself (wet fuels dont burn easily
    !)

26
FOREST FIRE BEHAVIOR
  • Fire Weather
  • Atmospheric stability (resistance to vertical
    motion)
  • Stable winds steady horizontal
  • Unstable gusty, turbulent winds, vertical
    motion, strong fire convection column possible
    (which, in turn, can dramatically modify local
    weather)

27
FOREST FIRE BEHAVIOR
  • Fire Weather
  • Wind
  • Rate of fire spread is proportional to square of
    wind speed
  • Wind speed direction affect shape of fire
  • Shifts in wind direction can turn a long flank
    into a large headfire

28
FOREST FIRE BEHAVIOR
  • Topography
  • Fires burn quickly upslope
  • Fires burn slowly downslope
  • South southwest slopes warmest driest
  • Slopes modify channel airflow patterns
  • Mountainous terrain ? wind turbulence

29
FOREST FIRE BEHAVIOR PREDICTION
  • Physics principles ? mathematical models
  • Models fire weather data ? predictions
  • E.g., National Fire-Danger Rating System predicts
  • Number of fires in an area
  • Ignition probability in an area
  • Rate of spread
  • Burn intensity
  • Fire perimeter location in future (for ongoing
    fires)

30
FOREST FIRE CONTROL
  • Control is
  • Cooperative
  • U. S. Forest Service
  • Bureau of Land Management
  • National Park Service
  • State government agencies
  • Private owners industry (sometimes)
  • Highly organized (think of military campaigns)

31
FOREST FIRE CONTROL REQUIRES DETECTION !
  • Detection methods
  • Lookout towers (gt5000 in 1950s few now)
  • Aerial detection (systematic daily flights, e.g.,
    Ontario)
  • Casual reports from public
  • Combination of the above

32
FOREST FIRE CONTROL SUPPRESSION
  • Suppression requires removal of one of
  • Fuel
  • Oxygen
  • Heat
  • Fire line removes fuel
  • Dirt, water, retardants reduce heat O2

33
FOREST FIRE CONTROL SUPPRESSION
  • Direct attack
  • Used on low-intensity fires
  • Fire line constructed at/near fire edge
  • Flames physically attacked (usually with dirt)
  • Indirect attack
  • Used if direct attack unsafe
  • Fire line constructed at distance
  • Backfires remove fuel between constructed fire
    line and headfire

34
FOREST FIRE CONTROL SUPPRESSION
  • Aerial Attack
  • Application from aircraft of
  • Water
  • Retardants
  • Flame-inhibiting chemicals
  • Surfactants (wetting agents)
  • Slurries (clay) minimize evaporation during drop
  • Supplement to ground attack
  • Delaying tactic
  • Cools hotspots
  • Not usually intended to extinguish fire

35
FOREST FIRE CONTROL SUPPRESSION
  • Conflagration Fires
  • Produce convection column
  • Create own weather (strong updraft, strong winds
    toward fire)
  • Self-sustaining
  • Spotting of embers long distances (gt 1 mile)
  • Can jump fire lines, lakes, rivers, roads
  • Can endanger and surround crews
  • Control infeasible until weather favorable

36
FOREST FIRE CONTROL SUPPRESSION STAGES
  • 1. Initial Attack
  • 2. Containment
  • Fire line around perimeter
  • Fire no longer spreading
  • 3. Mop-up
  • Follows containment
  • Extinguish all fires inside of fire line
  • Excavate burning stumps roots
  • May require winter to complete

37
FOREST FIRE PRESCRIBED BURNS
  • Use of fire to accomplish specific goals, e.g.
  • Reduction of logging debris (fuel) to reduce
    wildfire hazard
  • Seedbed preparation
  • Surface fuel reduction in standing forests
  • Understory vegetation control
  • Wildlife habitat improvement
  • Range improvement

38
FOREST FIRE PRESCRIBED BURNS
  • Advantages over mechanical methods
  • Economical
  • Energy efficient
  • Disadvantages
  • Risks to life and property
  • Air pollution
  • Few days per year with suitable burning
    conditions (in some regions)

39
FOREST FIRE PRESCRIBED BURNS
  • Planners must consider fire behavior
  • Topography
  • Weather conditions
  • Fuel conditions
  • Fire Prescription includes
  • Desired effects
  • Fire intensity and spread rate needed
  • Suitable conditions for ignition

40
FOREST FIRE PRESCRIBED BURNS
  • Fire line constructed prior to ignition
  • Test burn conducted prior to main burn
  • Fires ignited by drip torches or from air
  • Backfires are the least risky
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