Modeling the effects of different fuel treatment mosaics on wildfire spread and behavior in a Mediterranean agro-pastoral area
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2018
Abstract:
Wildfire spread and behavior can be limited by fuel treatments, even if their effects can vary according to
a number of factors including type, intensity, extension, and spatial arrangement. In this work, we
simulated the response of key wildfire exposure metrics to variations in the percentage of treated area,
treatment unit size, and spatial arrangement of fuel treatments under different wind intensities. The
study was carried out in a fire-prone 625 km2 agro-pastoral area mostly covered by herbaceous fuels, and
located in Northern Sardinia, Italy. We constrained the selection of fuel treatment units to areas covered
by specific herbaceous land use classes and low terrain slope (<10%). We treated 2%, 5% and 8% of the
landscape area, and identified priority sites to locate the fuel treatment units for all treatment alternatives.
The fuel treatment alternatives were designed create diverse mosaics of disconnected treatment
units with different sizes (0.5e10 ha, LOW strategy; 10e25 ha, MED strategy; 25e50 ha, LAR strategy); in
addition, treatment units in a 100-m buffer around the road network (ROAD strategy) were tested. We
assessed pre- and post-treatment wildfire behavior by the Minimum Travel Time (MTT) fire spread algorithm.
The simulations replicated a set of southwestern wind speed scenarios (16, 24 and 32 km h1
)
and the driest fuel moisture conditions observed in the study area. Our results showed that fuel treatments
implemented near the existing road network were significantly more efficient than the other
alternatives, and this difference was amplified at the highest wind speed. Moreover, the largest treatment
unit sizes were the most effective in containing wildfire growth. As expected, increasing the
percentage of the landscape treated and reducing wind speed lowered fire exposure profiles for all fuel
treatment alternatives, and this was observed at both the landscape scale and for highly valued resources.
The methodology presented in this study can support the design and optimization of fuel
management programs and policies in agro-pastoral areas of the Mediterranean Basin and herbaceous
type landscapes elsewhere, where recurrent grassland fires pose a threat to rural communities, farms
and infrastructures.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Fuel treatments; Burn probability; MTT algorithm; Mediterranean areas; Fire management; Fire risk
Elenco autori:
Salis, Michele; Duce, Pierpaolo; Arca, Bachisio
Link alla scheda completa:
Pubblicato in: