Calibration and evaluation of the Canadian Forest Fire Weather Index (FWI) System for improved wildland fire danger rating in the United Kingdom

被引:43
|
作者
de Jong, Mark C. [1 ]
Wooster, Martin J. [1 ,2 ]
Kitchen, Karl [3 ]
Manley, Cathy [4 ]
Gazzard, Rob [5 ]
McCall, Frank F. [4 ]
机构
[1] Kings Coll London, Dept Geog, London WC2R 2LS, England
[2] NCEO, Leicester, Leics, England
[3] Met Off, Exeter, Devon, England
[4] Forestry Commiss England, 620 Bristol Business Pk,Coldharbour Lane, Bristol BS16 1EJ, Avon, England
[5] Forestry Commiss England, Farnham GU10 4LS, Surrey, England
基金
英国自然环境研究理事会;
关键词
FUEL MOISTURE-CONTENT; RISK; SENSITIVITY; MANAGEMENT; REGRESSION; VEGETATION; FUTURE; MODEL;
D O I
10.5194/nhess-16-1217-2016
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
Wildfires in the United Kingdom (UK) pose a threat to people, infrastructure and the natural environment. During periods of particularly fire-prone weather, wildfires can occur simultaneously across large areas, placing considerable stress upon the resources of fire and rescue services. Fire danger rating systems (FDRSs) attempt to anticipate periods of heightened fire risk, primarily for early-warning and preparedness purposes. The UK FDRS, termed the Met Office Fire Severity Index (MOFSI), is based on the Fire Weather Index (FWI) component of the Canadian Forest FWI System. The MOFSI currently provides daily operational mapping of landscape fire danger across England and Wales using a simple thresholding of the final FWI component of the Canadian FWI System. However, it is known that the system has scope for improvement. Here we explore a climatology of the six FWI System components across the UK (i.e. extending to Scotland and Northern Ireland), calculated from daily 2km x 2km gridded numerical weather prediction data and supplemented by long-term meteorological station observations. We used this climatology to develop a percentile-based calibration of the FWI System, optimised for UK conditions. We find this approach to be well justified, as the values of the "raw" uncalibrated FWI components corresponding to a very "extreme" (99th percentile) fire danger situation vary by more than an order of magnitude across the country. Therefore, a simple thresholding of the uncalibrated component values (as is currently applied in the MOFSI) may incur large errors of omission and commission with respect to the identification of periods of significantly elevated fire danger. We evaluate our approach to enhancing UK fire danger rating using records of wildfire occurrence and find that the Fine Fuel Moisture Code (FFMC), Initial Spread Index (ISI) and FWI components of the FWI System generally have the greatest predictive skill for landscape fire activity across Great Britain, with performance varying seasonally and by land cover type. At the height of the most recent severe wildfire period in the UK (2 May 2011), 50% of all wildfires occurred in areas where the FWI component exceeded the 99th percentile. When all wildfire events during the 2010-2012 period are considered, the 75th, 90th and 99th percentiles of at least one FWI component were exceeded during 85, 61 and 18% of all wildfires respectively. Overall, we demonstrate the significant advantages of using a percentile-based calibration approach for classifying UK fire danger, and believe that our findings provide useful insights for future development of the current operational MOFSI UK FDRS.
引用
收藏
页码:1217 / 1237
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] The Mann Gulch Fire and the Canadian Forest Fire Danger Rating System
    Alexander, ME
    THIRD SYMPOSIUM ON FIRE AND FOREST METEOROLOGY, 2000, : 97 - 98
  • [2] THE CANADIAN FOREST FIRE DANGER RATING SYSTEM - AN OVERVIEW
    STOCKS, BJ
    LAWSON, BD
    ALEXANDER, ME
    VANWAGNER, CE
    MCALPINE, RS
    LYNHAM, TJ
    DUBE, DE
    FORESTRY CHRONICLE, 1989, 65 (06): : 450 - 457
  • [3] CANADIAN FOREST FIRE DANGER RATING SYSTEM - AN OVERVIEW
    STOCKS, BJ
    LAWSON, BD
    ALEXANDER, ME
    VANWAGNER, CE
    MCALPINE, RS
    LYNHAM, TJ
    DUBE, DE
    FORESTRY CHRONICLE, 1989, 65 (04): : 258 - 265
  • [4] Fire Weather Index (FWI) classification for fire danger assessment applied in Greece
    Varela, V.
    Sfetsos, A.
    Vlachogiannis, D.
    Gounaris, N.
    TETHYS-JOURNAL OF MEDITERRANEAN METEOROLOGY & CLIMATOLOGY, 2018, (15): : 31 - 40
  • [5] Index sensitivity analysis applied to the Canadian Forest Fire Weather Index and the McArthur Forest Fire Danger Index
    Dowdy, Andrew J.
    Mills, Graham A.
    Finkele, Klara
    de Groot, William
    METEOROLOGICAL APPLICATIONS, 2010, 17 (03) : 298 - 312
  • [6] Economic evaluation of research to improve the Canadian forest fire danger rating system
    Gould, James S.
    Patriquin, Mike N.
    Wang, Sen
    McFarlane, Bonita L.
    Wotton, B. Mike
    FORESTRY, 2013, 86 (03): : 317 - 329
  • [7] Evaluation of new methods for drought estimation in the Canadian Forest Fire Danger Rating System
    Hanes, Chelene C.
    Wotton, Mike
    Bourgeau-Chavez, Laura
    Woolford, Douglas G.
    Belair, Stephane
    Martell, David
    Flannigan, Mike D.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WILDLAND FIRE, 2023, 32 (06) : 836 - 853
  • [8] FIRE DANGER ASSESSMENT BASED ON THE IMPROVED FIRE WEATHER INDEX
    Kussul, Nataliia
    Yailymov, Bohdan
    Shelestov, Andrii
    Yailymova, Hanna
    2022 IEEE INTERNATIONAL GEOSCIENCE AND REMOTE SENSING SYMPOSIUM (IGARSS 2022), 2022, : 1584 - 1587
  • [9] cffdrs: an R package for the Canadian Forest Fire Danger Rating System
    Xianli Wang
    B. Mike Wotton
    Alan S. Cantin
    Marc-André Parisien
    Kerry Anderson
    Brett Moore
    Mike D. Flannigan
    Ecological Processes, 6
  • [10] cffdrs: an R package for the Canadian Forest Fire Danger Rating System
    Wang, Xianli
    Wotton, B. Mike
    Cantin, Alan S.
    Parisien, Marc-Andre
    Anderson, Kerry
    Moore, Brett
    Flannigan, Mike D.
    ECOLOGICAL PROCESSES, 2017, 6