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

Articles citing this paper

The transferability of a dNBR-derived model to predict burn severity across 10 wildland fires in western Canada

Nicholas O. Soverel A , Nicholas C. Coops A E , Daniel D. B. Perrakis B , Lori D. Daniels C and Sarah E. Gergel D
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Department of Forest Resource Management, 2424 Main Mall, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, V6T 1Z4, Canada. Email: nsoverel@gmail.com

B Western and Northern Service Centre, Parks Canada, 1550, 635 8 Avenue SW, Calgary, AB, T2P 3M3, Canada. Email: dan.perrakis@pc.gc.ca

C Tree-Ring Laboratory at UBC, Department of Geography, The University of British Columbia, 2171984 West Mall, Vancouver, BC, V6T 1Z2, Canada. Email: daniels@geog.ubc.ca

D Department of Forest Sciences and Centre for Applied Conservation Research, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, V6T 1Z4, Canada. Email: sarah.gergel@ubc.ca

E Corresponding author. Email: nicholas.coops@ubc.ca

International Journal of Wildland Fire 20(4) 518-531 https://doi.org/10.1071/WF10081
Submitted: 17 July 2010  Accepted: 17 September 2010   Published: 20 June 2011



39 articles found in Crossref database.

Geographic Information Systems - Data Science Approach (2023)
Zagalikis Georgios
Relating pre-fire canopy species, fire season, and proximity to surface waters to burn severity of boreal wildfires in Alberta, Canada
Rupasinghe Prabha Amali, Chow-Fraser Patricia
Forest Ecology and Management. 2021 496 p.119386
Extreme Fire Severity Patterns in Topographic, Convective and Wind-Driven Historical Wildfires of Mediterranean Pine Forests
Lecina-Diaz Judit, Alvarez Albert, Retana Javier, Chen Han Y. H.
PLoS ONE. 2014 9(1). p.e85127
Rapid recovery of soil bacterial communities after wildfire in a Chinese boreal forest
Xiang Xingjia, Shi Yu, Yang Jian, Kong Jianjian, Lin Xiangui, Zhang Huayong, Zeng Jun, Chu Haiyan
Scientific Reports. 2014 4(1).
Different approaches make comparing studies of burn severity challenging: a review of methods used to link remotely sensed data with the Composite Burn Index
Miller Colton W., Harvey Brian J., Kane Van R., Moskal L. Monika, Alvarado Ernesto
International Journal of Wildland Fire. 2023 32(4). p.449
A statistical approach to site-specific thresholding for burn severity maps using bi-temporal Landsat-8 images
Kadakci̇ Koca Tümay
Earth Science Informatics. 2023 16(2). p.1313
A comparison and validation of satellite-derived fire severity mapping techniques in fire prone north Australian savannas: Extreme fires and tree stem mortality
Edwards Andrew C., Russell-Smith Jeremy, Maier Stefan W.
Remote Sensing of Environment. 2018 206 p.287
Quantifying fire trends in boreal forests with Landsat time series and self-organized criticality
Kato Akira, Thau David, Hudak Andrew T., Meigs Garrett W., Moskal L. Monika
Remote Sensing of Environment. 2020 237 p.111525
Post-fire tree recruitment of a boreal larch forest in Northeast China
Cai Wenhua, Yang Jian, Liu Zhihua, Hu Yuanman, Weisberg Peter J.
Forest Ecology and Management. 2013 307 p.20
A New Model for Transfer Learning-Based Mapping of Burn Severity
Zheng Zhong, Wang Jinfei, Shan Bo, He Yongjun, Liao Chunhua, Gao Yanghua, Yang Shiqi
Remote Sensing. 2020 12(4). p.708
Burn severity mapping from Landsat MESMA fraction images and Land Surface Temperature
Quintano Carmen, Fernandez-Manso Alfonso, Roberts Dar A.
Remote Sensing of Environment. 2017 190 p.83
Generating intra-year metrics of wildfire progression using multiple open-access satellite data streams
Crowley Morgan A., Cardille Jeffrey A., White Joanne C., Wulder Michael A.
Remote Sensing of Environment. 2019 232 p.111295
What determines variation in remotely sensed fire severity? Consideration of remote sensing limitations and confounding factors
Gale Matthew G., Cary Geoffrey J.
International Journal of Wildland Fire. 2022 31(3). p.291
Multi-sensor, multi-scale, Bayesian data synthesis for mapping within-year wildfire progression
Crowley Morgan A., Cardille Jeffrey A., White Joanne C., Wulder Michael A.
Remote Sensing Letters. 2019 10(3). p.302
Short-Term Recovery of the Aboveground Carbon Stock in Iberian Shrublands at the Extremes of an Environmental Gradient and as a Function of Burn Severity
Fernández-Guisuraga José Manuel, Calvo Leonor, Fernandes Paulo M., Suárez-Seoane Susana
Forests. 2022 13(2). p.145
A systematic evaluation of influence of image selection process on remote sensing-based burn severity indices in North American boreal forest and tundra ecosystems
Chen Dong, Loboda Tatiana V., Hall Joanne V.
ISPRS Journal of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. 2020 159 p.63
Remote Sensing Techniques in Monitoring Post-Fire Effects and Patterns of Forest Recovery in Boreal Forest Regions: A Review
Chu Thuan, Guo Xulin
Remote Sensing. 2013 6(1). p.470
How Robust Are Burn Severity Indices When Applied in a New Region? Evaluation of Alternate Field-Based and Remote-Sensing Methods
Cansler C. Alina, McKenzie Donald
Remote Sensing. 2012 4(2). p.456
Temporal dependence of burn severity assessment in Siberian larch (Larix sibirica) forest of northern Mongolia using remotely sensed data
Chu Thuan, Guo Xulin, Takeda Kazuo
International Journal of Wildland Fire. 2016 25(6). p.685
MOSEV: a global burn severity database from MODIS (2000–2020)
Alonso-González Esteban, Fernández-García Víctor
Earth System Science Data. 2021 13(5). p.1925
Mapeo semiautomático de áreas quemadas en Chimborazo-Ecuador utilizando medias compuestas de dNBR con umbrales ajustados
Cisneros-Vaca César, Calahorrano Julia, Abarca María, Manzano Mery
Revista de Teledetección. 2023 (62). p.89
Giving Ecological Meaning to Satellite-Derived Fire Severity Metrics across North American Forests
Parks , Holsinger , Koontz , Collins , Whitman , Parisien , Loehman , Barnes , Bourdon , Boucher , Boucher , Caprio , Collingwood , Hall , Park , Saperstein , Smetanka , Smith , Soverel
Remote Sensing. 2019 11(14). p.1735
Spatiotemporal Analysis of Wildfires in the Forest Tundra of Western Siberia
Moskovchenko D. V., Aref’ev S. P., Moskovchenko M. D., Yurtaev A. A.
Contemporary Problems of Ecology. 2020 13(2). p.193
High-severity fire reduces early successional boreal larch forest aboveground productivity by shifting stand density in north-eastern China
Cai Wen H., Yang Jian
International Journal of Wildland Fire. 2016 25(8). p.861
Assessment of burn severity in Middle Povozhje with Landsat multitemporal data
Kurbanov Eldar, Vorobyev Oleg, Leznin Sergey, Polevshikova Yulia, Demisheva Ekaterina
International Journal of Wildland Fire. 2017 26(9). p.772
Trends in wildfire burn severity across Canada, 1985 to 2015
Guindon Luc, Gauthier Sylvie, Manka Francis, Parisien Marc-André, Whitman Ellen, Bernier Pierre, Beaudoin André, Villemaire Philippe, Skakun Rob
Canadian Journal of Forest Research. 2021 51(9). p.1230
Environmental indicators combined with risk analysis to evaluate potential wildfire incidence on the Dadu Plateau in Taiwan
Lin Chao-Yuan, Shieh Pei-Ying, Wu Shao-Wei, Wang Po-Cheng, Chen Yung-Chau
Natural Hazards. 2022 113(1). p.287
Quantifying influences and relative importance of fire weather, topography, and vegetation on fire size and fire severity in a Chinese boreal forest landscape
Fang Lei, Yang Jian, Zu Jiaxing, Li Guicai, Zhang Jiashen
Forest Ecology and Management. 2015 356 p.2
Burn severity metrics in fire-prone pine ecosystems along a climatic gradient using Landsat imagery
Fernández-García Víctor, Santamarta Mónica, Fernández-Manso Alfonso, Quintano Carmen, Marcos Elena, Calvo Leonor
Remote Sensing of Environment. 2018 206 p.205
Predicting post-fire canopy mortality in the boreal forest from dNBR derived from time series of Landsat data
San-Miguel Ignacio, Andison David W., Coops Nicholas C., Rickbeil Gregory J. M.
International Journal of Wildland Fire. 2016 25(7). p.762
Field-Validated Burn-Severity Mapping in North Patagonian Forests
Franco María Guadalupe, Mundo Ignacio A., Veblen Thomas T.
Remote Sensing. 2020 12(2). p.214
Assessing the potential of the differenced Normalized Burn Ratio (dNBR) for estimating burn severity in eastern Canadian boreal forests
Boucher Jonathan, Beaudoin André, Hébert Christian, Guindon Luc, Bauce Éric
International Journal of Wildland Fire. 2017 26(1). p.32
Differentiating mixed- and high-severity fire regimes in mixed-conifer forests of the Canadian Cordillera
Marcoux Hélène M., Daniels Lori D., Gergel Sarah E., Da Silva Eric, Gedalof Ze’ev, Hessburg Paul F.
Forest Ecology and Management. 2015 341 p.45
Mapping burn severity in the western Italian Alps through phenologically coherent reflectance composites derived from Sentinel-2 imagery
Morresi Donato, Marzano Raffaella, Lingua Emanuele, Motta Renzo, Garbarino Matteo
Remote Sensing of Environment. 2022 269 p.112800
Do you CBI what I see? The relationship between the Composite Burn Index and quantitative field measures of burn severity varies across gradients of forest structure
Saberi Saba J., Agne Michelle C., Harvey Brian J.
International Journal of Wildland Fire. 2022 31(2). p.112
The spatial variation in forest burn severity in Heilongjiang Province, China
Chang Yu, Zhu Zhiliang, Feng Yuting, Li Yuehui, Bu Rencang, Hu Yuanman
Natural Hazards. 2016 81(2). p.981
Relationships between Satellite-Based Spectral Burned Ratios and Terrestrial Laser Scanning
Kato Akira, Moskal L. Monika, Batchelor Jonathan L., Thau David, Hudak Andrew T.
Forests. 2019 10(5). p.444
Does Environment Filtering or Seed Limitation Determine Post-fire Forest Recovery Patterns in Boreal Larch Forests?
Cai Wen H., Liu Zhihua, Yang Yuan Z., Yang Jian
Frontiers in Plant Science. 2018 9
Testing the utility of the blue spectral region in burned area mapping: Insights from savanna wildfires
Mpakairi Kudzai Shaun, Kadzunge Shamiso Lynnet, Ndaimani Henry
Remote Sensing Applications: Society and Environment. 2020 20 p.100365

Committee on Publication Ethics


Abstract Export Citation Get Permission