Utilization of NOAA AVHRR for assessing the determinants of savanna fire distribution in Burkina Faso
Thomas Theis Nielsen and Kjeld Rasmussen
International Journal of Wildland Fire 10(2) 129 - 135
Abstract
Temporal and spatial patterns of active fires, detected using NOAA AVHRR LAC
data, in Burkina Faso are identified and related to vegetation, tree cover and
land use classes. Initially, fires are classified into early and late dry
season fires (EDSF and LDSF). Early dry season fires are defined as fires
occurring earlier than 45 days after the start of the dry season, marked by a
levelling out in the post-rainy season temperature increase, determined on the
basis of surface temperature data derived from NOAA AVHRR. The date of the
start of the dry season, defined in this way, is shown to be a linear function
of the latitude. The distribution of fire occurrence are shown to display
distinctively different patterns. These distribution patterns are related to
information on vegetation class, woody biomass and land use intensity as well
as net primary productivity, estimated from NOAA AVHRR rainy season data. It
is shown that overall fire frequency and the ratio of early to late dry season
fire activity depend strongly on net primary productivity, land use intensity
and vegetation class. Late fires tend to occur mainly in agricultural areas,
whereas early fires are much more frequent in areas of low land use intensity
in the wooded savannas of southern Burkina Faso.
Keywords: savanna fires, remote sensing, Burkina Faso,
vegetation types, NOAA AVHRR, GIS.
Full text doi:10.1071/WF01015
© CSIRO 2001





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