Title: The Wildland
1The WildlandUrban Interface (WUI) From Simple
Models to Mitigating Fire Risk
Michael Ghil Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris,
and University of California, Los Angeles V.
Spyratos, ENS ENGREF P. Bourgeron, INSTAAR,
CU, Boulder and C. Lampin M. Jappiot,
CEMAGREF, Aix-en-Provence
Please see these sites for further
details http//www.environnement.ens.fr/ ,
http//e2c2.ipsl.jussieu.fr/ http//www.atmos.ucla
.edu/tcd/, http//www.aix.cemagref.fr/htmlpub/divi
sions/afax/emax.htm
2Motivation
- The WUI occupies about 10 of the surface and
contains about 40 of the houses in the
conterminous U.S. - Fires have caused huge damages in the WUI in the
Western U.S., as well as Southern Europe this
past summer and fall. - Further spreading of construction into
(semi-)pristine vegetated areas. - Global change seems to increase dryness in the
areas of interest. - Actual joint, interactive modeling of housing and
vegetation seems to be novel and interesting. - Simple, toy models can provide useful ideas.
- The hierarchical modeling approach allows one to
go - back-and-forth between toy (conceptual) and
detailed (realistic) models, and between models
and data.
3Some spectacular WUI fires
A house is threatened by a wall of flames from a
wild fire west of the Missionary Ridge fire,
north of Durango, Colorado (AP/Charlie Riedel).
As Colorado burns in the summer of 2002, flames
from a new fire loom menacingly behind a mountain
home near Durango (Barry Gutierrez)
4A toy model of the WUI
A lattice model with nearest-neighbor
interactions, already used in forest-fire
modeling novelty is including the houses.
- Panels (a, b, c) the
- central cell is ignited
- its a tree stand
- its a flammable house or
- Its a fireproofed house.
Panels (d, e) example of fire spreading
over the landscape red cells are on fire, black
cells are burnt green and yellow cells are
unburnt trees and houses.
5Fire-spread probability
- Mean fire size S as a function of p, the
vegetations - probability of fire spread, for different house
densities - d d0 indicates fireproofed houses only, d1
flammable - houses only.
6Fire proofing vs. Fuel treatment
Regime diagram of mean fire size S as a function
of p and d (d0 or d1) (a) note narrow
transition zone between widespread and limited
fire size and (b) higher efficiency of
fireproofing of houses.
7Application to Mediterranean landscapes
Fire distribution over 2 days in Europe GIS tool
8Motivations are similar to Western U.S.
Urbanization in a forested area, in the South of
France
Contexte (6/8)
9Methodology Combine 2 criteria
Structure of vegetation
Structure of habitat
10Density of fire outbreaks per 1000 ha over the
period 19972006
Source fire data ONF
C. Lampin, Ph. D. Thesis 2007
Site of Aix
11Some conclusions /or questions
- What do we know?
- Its getting warmer and drier, which favors
forest fires. - Houses spread, which puts more people goods at
risk. - So, we should try to improve fire protection.
- Fire proofing entire communities seems to help,
both the community and the vegetation in which it
is immersed.
- What do we know less well?
- How, exactly, do houses interact with forest
fires? - How does climatic change affect this
interaction?
- What to do?
- Better understand the system and its forcings.
- Use a full hierarchy of forest-fire and climate
models to do so.
12Some references
- Malamud, B.D., G. Morein, D. L. Turcotte, 1998
Forest fires An example of self-organized
critical behavior, Science, 281, 18401842. - Hargrove, W.W., R.H. Gardner, M.G. Turner, W.H.
Romme, D.G. Despain, 2000 Simulating fire
pattern in heterogeneous landscapes, Ecological
Modelling, 135, pp 243263. - Spyratos, V., P. Bourgeron, and M. Ghil, 2007
Development at the wildlandurban interface and
the mitigation of forest-fire risks, Proc. Natl.
Acad. Sci. USA, 104 1427214276 doi
10.1073/pnas.0704488104.