Register      Login
International Journal of Wildland Fire International Journal of Wildland Fire Society
Journal of the International Association of Wildland Fire
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Accurate estimation of mean fire interval for managing fire

Xiaojun Kou A and William L. Baker B C
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A College of Life Sciences, Beijing Normal University, Beijing 150040, China.

B Ecology Program and Department of Geography, University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY 82071, USA.

C Corresponding author. Email: bakerwl@uwyo.edu

International Journal of Wildland Fire 15(4) 489-495 https://doi.org/10.1071/WF05113
Published: 7 December 2006

Abstract

Accurate fire-history data are needed if local management of fire or costly national plans for restoring and managing fire and forest structure are to succeed. Fire-history researchers often use fire scars and the composite fire interval method to reconstruct parameters of past fire regimes, such as the population mean fire interval, but the composite method has serious limitations. We modified an alternative non-composite fire interval method, the individual-tree fire-interval method, to derive a more accurate new method, the all-tree fire-interval method. A stochastic fire-scar generating model to assess the accuracy of the new method and its predecessors was then used. Three factors (scarring ratio, population mean fire interval, and tree age) that affect accuracy were varied in the model runs. More complexity (trees with varied scarring ratio between the first scar and successive scars) also was modelled to test the robustness of the method. The all-tree fire-interval method was shown to greatly improve accuracy and provide unbiased estimates of the population mean fire interval. The method also produced encouraging results when scarring was more complex. The new all-tree fire-interval method will require further research on the rates at which trees are scarred by fire, but this would be generally beneficial to understanding fire history.

Additional keywords: fire history; fire regime; fire scars; historical range of variability; paleoecology.


References


Arno SF, Petersen TD (1983) ‘Variation in estimates of fire intervals: a closer look at fire history on the Bitterroot National Forest.’ USDA Forest Service, Intermountain Forest and Range Experiment Station Research Paper INT-301. (Ogden, UT)

Arno SF, Sneck KM (1977) ‘A method for determining fire history in coniferous forests of the mountain West.’ USDA Forest Service, Intermountain Forest and Range Experiment Station General Technical Report INT-42. (Ogden, UT)

Baker WL (2006) Fire history in ponderosa pine landscapes of Grand Canyon National Park: is it reliable enough for management and restoration? International Journal of Wildland Fire  15, 433–437.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | Dieterich JH (1980) The composite fire interval – a tool for more accurate interpretation of fire history. In ‘Proceedings of the fire history workshop’. (Eds MA Stokes, JH Dieterich) pp. 8–14. USDA Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Forest and Range Experiment Station General Technical Report RM-81. (Fort Collins, CO)

Fall JG (1998) Reconstructing the historical frequency of fire: a modeling approach to developing and testing methods. MS Thesis, Simon Fraser University, Burneby, BC, Canada.

Johnson EA , Gutsell SL (1994) Fire frequency models, methods and interpretations. Advances in Ecological Research  25, 239–287.
Laven RD, Omi PN, Wyant JG, Pinkerton AS (1980) Interpretation of fire scar data from a ponderosa pine ecosystem in the central Rocky Mountains, Colorado. In ‘Proceedings of the fire history workshop’. (Eds MA Stokes, JH Dieterich) pp. 46–49. USDA Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Forest and Range Experiment Station General Technical Report RM-81. (Fort Collins, CO)

Niklasson M , Granström A (2000) Numbers and sizes of fires: long-term spatially explicit fire history in a Swedish boreal landscape. Ecology  81, 1484–1499.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | Romme W (1980) Fire history terminology: report to the ad hoc committee. In ‘Proceedings of the fire history workshop’. (Eds MA Stokes, JH Dieterich) pp. 135–137. USDA Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Forest and Range Experiment Station General Technical Report RM-81. (Fort Collins, CO)

Wallenius TH, Kuuluvainen T , Vanha-Majamaa I (2004) Fire history in relation to site type and vegetation in Vienansalo wilderness in eastern Fennoscandia, Russia. Canadian Journal of Forest Research  34, 1400–1409.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |