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What dictates fire behavior–the fire behavior triangle. Why do ecologists care?

What dictates fire behavior–the fire behavior triangle. Why do ecologists care? . 1. Weather 2. Fuels 3. Topography. Fire behavior largely determines fire effects!. Fuel Types- 4 Categories: where it is located.

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What dictates fire behavior–the fire behavior triangle. Why do ecologists care?

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  1. What dictates fire behavior–the fire behavior triangle. Why do ecologists care? 1. Weather 2. Fuels 3. Topography Fire behavior largely determines fire effects!

  2. Fuel Types- 4 Categories: where it is located Fire behavior is largely determined by which fuel strata is carrying the fire: • Ground • Surface • Ladder • Crown/ aerial

  3. Fuel Types • Ground Fuels • Duff (partially decomposed) • Peat • Roots • Stumps litter fermentation layer Duff humus mineral soil

  4. Fuel Types • Surface Fuels • Grasses • Shrubs • Litter (leaves) • Woody debris

  5. SURFACE AND GROUND FUELS

  6. Fuels • Aerial/ canopy Fuels • Crown or canopy of overstory • Ladder Fuels (located between crown and surface fuels) • Smaller trees • Vines

  7. For each fire type: Fuel Characteristics influence fire behavior • Fuel Loading • Size and shape • Compaction • Chemistry • Arrangement • Vertical • Composition • Continuity • horizontal

  8. Fuel Loading

  9. Fuel loading- do we just weigh everything that can burn? • Fuel loading is simplified by categorizing fuels into similar groups • All fuels are characterized by their size category, called “timelag fuel class”. This is related to their capacity to absorb and lose water in relation to their environment. • The most important factor associated with fuel size is its surface area to volume ratio…why?

  10. Timelag Fuel Class • EMC = equilibrium moisture content: the watever vapor pressure of the fuel is in equilibrium with the wvp of air. • Given a stable air mass, the “timelag” is time it takes for a particle of fuel to reach 63% of the difference between its initial moisture content and the equilibrium moisture content. • It is NOT how long the fuel will burn

  11. Timelag= approaching equilibrium • It takes 5 timelags for 95% of the change to occur • But most of the change happens within the first timelag Difference http://stream2.cma.gov.cn/pub/comet/FireWeather/S290Unit10FuelMoisture/comet/fire/s290/unit10/print.htm#page_2.2.0

  12. Larger fuels lose and absorb water less quickly http://stream2.cma.gov.cn/pub/comet/FireWeather/S290Unit10FuelMoisture/comet/fire/s290/unit10/print.htm#page_2.2.0

  13. Timelag categories (know these!) • Size of fuel (diameter, inched) Timelag Class • 0” to ¼” 1 hour • ¼” to 1” 1o hour • 1” to 3” 100 hour • > 3” 1000 hour

  14. Three ways to assess fuel loading • Fuel models • Photo series • Measure it

  15. Fuel Loading – what do you include? Timber Brush

  16. Fuel models use 4 fuel groupings- based on proportion in each timelag class Anderson, 1982 Fuel Models and Fire Behavior Prediction

  17. The 13 fuel models

  18. Example BEHAVE outputs: Rate of spread Rate of Spread for Fuel models at 5 mph wind

  19. FUEL MODEL 13: HEAVY LOGGING SLASH

  20. 6-10 tons/ acre FUEL MODEL 7: SOUTHERN ROUGH

  21. 3-5 tons/acre FUEL MODEL 8: CLOSED TIMBER LITTER

  22. 1-3 tons/acre FUEL MODEL 3: TALL GRASS

  23. Photo series • Hundreds of field plots measured= averaged = photo series fuel loading values. • Digital photo series (USFS) • http://depts.washington.edu/nwfire/dps/

  24. MEASURE IT: Today’s Lab! • Brown’s Planar Intercept

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