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Article << Previous     |     Next >>   Contents Vol 16(2)

Application of the Nelson model to four timelag fuel classes using Oklahoma field observations: model evaluation and comparison with National Fire Danger Rating System algorithms

J. D. Carlson A F, Larry S. Bradshaw B, Ralph M. Nelson C, Randall R. Bensch D, Rafal Jabrzemski E

A Biosystems and Agricultural Engineering, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK 74078, USA.
B USDA Forest Service, Fire Sciences Laboratory, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Missoula, MT 59807, USA.
C USDA Forest Service (retired), Leland, NC 28451, USA.
D Agricultural producer, Slapout, OK 73848, USA.
E Oklahoma Climatological Survey, Norman, OK 73019, USA.
F Corresponding author. Email: jdc@okstate.edu
 
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Abstract

The application of a next-generation dead-fuel moisture model, the ‘Nelson model’, to four timelag fuel classes using an extensive 21-month dataset of dead-fuel moisture observations is described. Developed by Ralph Nelson in the 1990s, the Nelson model is a dead-fuel moisture model designed to take advantage of frequent automated weather observations. Originally developed for 10-h fuels, the model is adaptable to other fuel size classes through modification of the model’s fuel stick parameters. The algorithms for dead-fuel moisture in the National Fire Danger Rating System (NFDRS), on the other hand, were originally developed in the 1970s, utilise once-a-day weather information, and were designed to estimate dead-fuel moisture for mid-afternoon conditions. Including all field observations over the 21-month period, the Nelson model showed improvement over NFDRS for each size fuel size class, with r2 values ranging from 0.51 (1000-h fuels) to 0.79 (10-h fuels). However, for observed fuel moisture at or below 30%, the NFDRS performed better than the Nelson model for 1-h fuels and was about the same accuracy as the Nelson for 10-h fuels. The Nelson model is targeted for inclusion in the next-generation NFDRS.

Keywords: dead-fuel moisture, modelling.


   
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