CSIRO Publishing Books Journals About Us Shopping Cart You are here: Journals > International Journal of Wildland Fire   
International Journal of Wildland Fire
  Published on behalf of the International Association of Wildland Fire
 
Search
 
 
  Advanced Search
   

Journal Home
About the Journal
Editorial Board
Contacts
Content
Online Early
Current Issue
Just Accepted
All Issues
Special Issues
Sample Issue
For Authors
General Information
Notice to Authors
Submit Article
For Referees
General Information
Review Article
Annual Referee Index
For Subscribers
Subscription Prices
Customer Service
Print Publication Dates

 Early Alert
Subscribe to our email Early Alert or RSS feeds for the latest journal papers.

 Connect with us
facebook   youtube

Training

Publication Workshops


 

Article << Previous     |     Next >>   Contents Vol 16(5)

Estimating direct carbon emissions from Canadian wildland fires1

William J. de Groot A E, Robert Landry B, Werner A. Kurz C, Kerry R. Anderson A, Peter Englefield A, Robert H. Fraser B, Ronald J. Hall A, Ed Banfield A, Donald A. Raymond B, Vincent Decker B, Tim J. Lynham D, Janet M. Pritchard A

A Natural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Service, Northern Forestry Centre, 5320 – 122nd Street, Edmonton, AB T6H 3S5 Canada.
B Natural Resources Canada, Earth Sciences Sector, Canada Centre for Remote Sensing, 588 Booth Street, Ottawa, ON K1A 0Y7 Canada.
C Natural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Service, Pacific Forestry Centre, 506 West Burnside Road, Victoria, BC V8Z 1M5 Canada.
D Natural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Service, Great Lakes Forestry Centre, 1219 Queen Street East, Sault Ste. Marie, ON P6A 2E5 Canada.
E Corresponding author. Email: bill.degroot@nrcan.gc.ca
 
PDF (652 KB) $25
 Export Citation
 Print
  


Abstract

In support of Canada’s National Forest Carbon Monitoring, Accounting and Reporting System, a project was initiated to develop and test procedures for estimating direct carbon emissions from fires. The Canadian Wildland Fire Information System (CWFIS) provides the infrastructure for these procedures. Area burned and daily fire spread estimates are derived from satellite products. Spatially and temporally explicit indices of burning conditions for each fire are calculated by CWFIS using fire weather data. The Carbon Budget Model of the Canadian Forest Sector (CBM-CFS3) provides detailed forest type and leading species information, as well as pre-fire fuel load data. The Boreal Fire Effects Model calculates fuel consumption for different live biomass and dead organic matter pools in each burned cell according to fuel type, fuel load, burning conditions, and resulting fire behaviour. Carbon emissions are calculated from fuel consumption. CWFIS summarises the data in the form of disturbance matrices and provides spatially explicit estimates of area burned for national reporting. CBM-CFS3 integrates, at the national scale, these fire data with data on forest management and other disturbances. The methodology for estimating fire emissions was tested using a large-fire pilot study. A framework to implement the procedures at the national scale is described.

Keywords: fire behaviour, fuel consumption, remote sensing.



1 A paper presented in session 020, ‘Global Fire Trends and Climate Change,’ at the XXII International Union of Forest Research Organizations World Congress in Brisbane, Australia, 8–13 August 2005.

2 Fuel types include: C-1 (spruce-lichen woodland), C-2 (boreal spruce), C-3 and C-4 combined (mature and immature jack or lodgepole pine), C-5 (red and white pine), C-6 (conifer plantation), C-7 (ponderosa pine/Douglas-fir), D-1 (leafless aspen), M-1 and M-2 (boreal mixedwood), O-1 (grass).

3 An operational-scale version of the model, user’s guide, and tutorials are freely available at http://carbon.cfs.nrcan.gc.ca/, accessed 20 September 2007.
   
Subscriber Login
Username:
Password:  

    


 
Top  Email this page
 
Legal & Privacy | Contact Us | Help

CSIRO

© CSIRO 1996-2012