Authors
Matthias M Boer, Rachael H Nolan, Víctor Resco De Dios, Hamish Clarke, Owen F Price, Ross A Bradstock
Publication date
2017/12
Journal
Earth's Future
Volume
5
Issue
12
Pages
1196-1202
Publisher
Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Description
Changing frequencies of extreme weather events and shifting fire seasons call for enhanced capability to forecast where and when forested landscapes switch from a nonflammable (i.e., wet fuel) state to the highly flammable (i.e., dry fuel) state required for catastrophic forest fires. Current forest fire danger indices used in Europe, North America, and Australia rate potential fire behavior by combining numerical indices of fuel moisture content, potential rate of fire spread, and fire intensity. These numerical rating systems lack the physical basis required to reliably quantify forest flammability outside the environments of their development or under novel climate conditions. Here, we argue that exceedance of critical forest flammability thresholds is a prerequisite for major forest fires and therefore early warning systems should be based on a reliable prediction of fuel moisture content plus a regionally calibrated model of …
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