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Journal Article

Citation

Fox DM, Carrega P, Ren Y, Caillouet P, Bouillon C, Robert S. Sci. Total Environ. 2017; 621: 120-129.

Affiliation

UMR 7300 ESPACE CNRS, Université d'Aix-Marseille, France.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.11.174

PMID

29179067

Abstract

Wildfires burn >450,000ha of forest every year in Euro-Mediterranean countries. Many fires originate in the Wildland Urban Interface (WUI) where housing density and weather conditions affect fire occurrence. Housing density is determined by long term land use policies while weather conditions evolve quickly. The first objective was to quantify the impacts of land use policy on WUI characteristics and fire risk in SE France during 1990-2012. The second objective was to quantify how Fire Weather Index (FWI) is related to fire occurrence. WUI was mapped from 1990, 1999, and 2012 building layers and crossed with a NDVI derived vegetation layer. In all, 12 WUI categories were derived: 4 building density classes and 3 vegetation layers. The I87 FWI was based on daily temperature, wind speed, relative humidity and soil water content. Despite a 30% increase in the number of new buildings, WUI area increased by only 5% as new housing filled in open space in existing WUI area. This trend can be linked to national level urban planning legislation and forest fire protection laws. Major driver variables determining housing location were aspect, slope, and distance to city centers. Fire frequency and burned area were nonlinearly related to FWI: 73% of the 99 fires occurred during weeks with FWI values ≥90 even though these accounted for only 44% of all weeks. Burned area was even more sensitive to FWI since 97% of total burned area occurred during weeks with mean FWI values ≥90. All days with burned areas >100ha had FWI values >150. The study demonstrated that WUI legislation can be an efficient tool to limit WUI fire risk. FWI results suggest the predicted increase in extreme summer heat events with global warming could increase burned area as firefighting resources are stretched beyond capacity.

Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

Fire Weather Index (FWI); Forest fires; Land use planning; Wildfires; Wildland Urban Interface (WUI)

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