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Fire Behavior Fuel Models: Making the right choice

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Title: Fire Behavior Fuel Models: Making the right choice


1
Fire Behavior Fuel ModelsMaking the right
choice
  • Robert Ziel
  • Michigan DNR

2
My Points
  • Emphasize the importance of projecting fire
    behavior for any situation or before conducting a
    prescribed burn.
  • Examine the two primary fire behavior prediction
    systems (NFBPS and CFFBPS) used in MI and
    identify the significant differences between
    them.
  • Compare the Fuel Model sets incorporated into
    each fire behavior prediction system, the way
    they are categorized, and the basis for each.
  • Examine some of the interactions described in the
    Rothermel Surface Fire Spread Model and identify
    the ways in which the new fuel models can produce
    unexpected results.
  • Outline a process to help you select a fuel model
    for your situation

3
Importance of Fire Behavior Prediction
  • Planning for resources needed
  • Go-No Go Decision
  • Action planning
  • Briefing Purposes
  • Addressing liability
  • What level of detail is necessary?

4
Creeping/Spreading Surface Fire
5
Running Surface Fire
6
Spotting and Ignition
7
Crown Fire
8
Extreme Fire Behavior Mack Lake - May 5, 1980
9
Wildland Fire Behavior Characteristics
  • Which are important to your safety?
  • Drought stricken fuels may produce incredible
    heat
  • Spread Rate may affect your ability to react
  • Flame Length may affect fireline working
    conditions
  • Spotting Distance Ignition Probability are
    wildcards

10
Fire Modeling Tools in Michigan
  • US Fire Danger and Fire Behavior prediction
    tools are separate, fuel moisture estimates are
    common but fuel models and measures of ignition,
    spread and intensity are separate
  • CFFDRS Fire Weather Index System (FWI) assumes a
    pine fuel type, outputs (ISI BUI) are inputs to
    the Fire Behavior Prediction System

11
CFFDRSFWI Tables and FBP Red Book
Celsius Km/hr
meters/min Kw/m
Metric Units! English unit lookup tables
available, software too
12
Modeling Fire Behavior
  • Tools with new 40
  • BehavePlus
  • NEXUS
  • FARSITE
  • FLAMMAP
  • RERAP
  • FSPRO
  • Nomographs

13
Modeling on the Landscape
  • FARSITE FLAMMAP allow for fire spread and
    intensity projections across the landscape
  • Fuel classifications like LANDFIRE need to be
    based on remote sensing characteristics to
    facilitate updates

14
Access to FWI Infohttp//www.dnr.state.mi.us/www/
fmd/weather
15
(No Transcript)
16
  • Two Grass fuel types
  • Seven Conifer types
  • One leafless Deciduous type
  • Four Mixedwood types that allow user to enter
    conifer percent
  • 3 Slash types

17
Grass
  • O1a Matted Grass
  • O1b Standing Grass
  • user enters fuel load and percent cured

18
Conifer
  • C-1 Spruce-Lichen Woodland
  • C-2 Boreal Spruce
  • C-3 Mature Jack or Lodgepole Pine
  • C-4 Immature Jack or Lodgepole Pine
  • C-5 Red White Pine
  • C-6 Conifer Plantation
  • C-7 Ponderosa Pine / Douglas Fir

19
Mixedwood
  • M-1 Boreal Mixedwood Leafless
  • M-2 Boreal Mixedwood Green
  • M-3 Dead Balsam Fir Mixedwood Leafless
  • M-4 Dead Balsam Fir Mixedwood Green
  • User enters conifer

20
Deciduous
  • D-1 Leafless Aspen
  • D-2 Can be created by using M2 and setting the
    conifer percent to 0

21
Slash
  • S-1 Jack or Lodgepole Pine Slash
  • S-2 White Spruce/Balsam Fir Slash
  • S-3 Coastal Cedar/Hemlock/
  • Douglas Fir Slash

22
Standard Fuel Models for the Rothermel Fire
Spread Model
original FBFM13
new FBFM 40
23
FBFM 13 vs. FBFM 40
  • 4 categories of fuels
  • 3 Grass Models
  • 4 Shrub/Brush Models
  • 3 Timber Litter Models
  • 3 Slash Models
  • 6 categories of fuels
  • 9 Grass Models
  • 4 Grass-Shrub Models
  • 9 Shrub Models
  • 5 Timber Understory Models
  • 9 Timber Litter Models
  • 4 Slash/Blowdown Models

24
GRASS FUELS
  • FB1 Short Grass, dry
  • FB2 Timber (grass understory)
  • FB3 Tall Grass, humid
  • ----------------------------------------------
  • GR1 Short, Sparse, dry
  • GR2 Low load, dry
  • GR4 Moderate load, dry
  • GR7 High load, dry
  • ------------------------------------------------
  • GR3 Low Load, coarse, humid
  • GR5 Low Load, humid
  • GR6 Moderate load, humid
  • GR8 High load, very coarse, humid
  • GR9 Very high load, humid

25
GRASS SHRUB
  • GS1 low load, dry climate
  • GS2 moderate load, dry climate
  • ----------------------------
  • GS3 Moderate load, humid climate
  • GS4 High load, humid climate

26
SHRUBFUELS
  • FB4 Chaparral (6 ft)
  • FB5 Brush (2 ft)
  • FB6 Dormant brush
  • FB7 Southern rough
  • -------------------------------------------------
    ------------------------------
  • SH1 Low load, dry (D)
  • SH2 Moderate load, dry
  • SH5 High load, dry
  • SH7 Very high load, dry
  • -------------------------------------------------
    ----------------------------
  • SH3 Moderate load, humid
  • SH4 Low load, humid
  • SH6 low load, humid
  • SH8 high load, humid
  • SH9 VH load, humid (D)

27
TIMBERUNDERSTORY
  • FB10 Timber (litter and understory)
  • --------------------------------
  • TU1 Low load, dry (D)
  • TU4 Dwarf conifer with understory
  • TU5 Very High load, dry
  • --------------------------------
  • TU2 Moderate load, humid
  • TU3 Moderate load, humid (D)

28
TIMBERLITTER
  • FB8 Closed timber litter
  • FB9 Hardwood litter
  • ------------------------------------------------
    -------------------------------------------
  • TL1 low load compact conifer litter
  • TL3 moderate load conifer litter
  • TL5 High load conifer litter
  • TL8 long needle litter
  • -------------------------------------------------
    ------------------------------------------
  • TL4 Small downed logs
  • TL7 Large downed logs
  • -------------------------------------------------
    ------------------------------------------
  • TL2 low load broadleaf litter
  • TL6 Moderate load broadleaf litter
  • TL9 Very high load broadleaf litter

29
SLASHBLOWDOWN
  • FB11 light logging slash
  • FB12 Medium logging slash
  • FB13 Heavy logging slash
  • ---------------------------------------
  • SB1 low load slash
  • SB2 Moderate load slash, low load blowdown
  • SB3 High load slash, moderate load blowdown
  • SB4 High load blowdown

30
Comparing the two Systems
  • 40 New models suggest wider range of fire
    behavior due to seasonality than original 13
  • More choices allow better correlation between
    fuels vegetation for mapping
  • 14 of 40 new model fuels that burn under high
    dead fuel moisture conditions. Only 1 of 13 did.
  • Better simulates changes in fire behavior related
    to fuel treatments in forest fuels
  • Other info needed for crown fire prediction
  • Still a relatively small set of fuel types (16).
  • Fuel types are characterized by forest cover
    rather than surface fuels
  • Fuel Types are specific to Northern fuels
  • No Shrub fuel types modeled
  • Easy to apply with given FFMC, BUI and onsite
    windspeed
  • Automatically accounts for transition to crown
    fire

31
Rothermel Spread Model
Reaction Propagation Wind
Slope Intensity Flux Ratio
Coeff Coeff
Ir x ( 1 fw fs ) R
-------------------------------- rb e
Qig
HEAT SOURCE
HEAT SINK
Bulk Effective Heat
of Density Heating Number Preignition
32
US Fire Behavior Fuel Models
  • Intrinsic Fuel Properties
  • Dead Fuel Moisture of extinction ()
  • Live fuel moisture of extinction is calculated
  • Dead and Live Heat Content (btu/lb)
  • Mineral/ash content ()
  • Fixed in the current version of BehavePlus
  • Extrinsic Fuel Properties
  • Surface Area to Volume (sq ft/cu ft)
  • Fine Dead Fuel SVOL
  • Live Woody SVOL
  • Live Herbaceous SVOL
  • Quantity or Loading by size class (tons/acre)
  • Fuel bed depth (ft)
  • New in the 40 Dynamic Herbaceous Fuel Load
    Transfer

33
Dry vs. Humid Climate
GR4
GR5
GR5
GR4
  • Dead Moisture
  • of Extinction
  • GR4 15
  • GR5 40

34
US Fire Behavior Fuel Models
  • Intrinsic Fuel Properties
  • Dead Fuel Moisture of extinction ()
  • Live fuel moisture of extinction is calculated
  • Dead and Live Heat Content (btu/lb)
  • Mineral/ash content ()
  • Fixed in the current version of BehavePlus
  • Extrinsic Fuel Properties
  • Surface Area to Volume (sq ft/cu ft)
  • Fine Dead Fuel SVOL
  • Live Woody SVOL
  • Live Herbaceous SVOL
  • Quantity or Loading by size class (tons/acre)
  • Fuel bed depth (ft)
  • New in the 40 Dynamic Herbaceous Fuel Load
    Transfer

35
Dynamic Fuel Load Transfer
36
Dynamic Fuel Load Transfer
All new Grass, Grass-Shrub, Shrub19, Timber
Understory 1 3 are dynamic fuels
  • Herbaceous load is converted to dead load, either
    manually or based on HFM

37
Fire Behavior Predictions
Fire Environment Triangle
Fuel Models
Load Transfer
Fuel Moistures
Live Herbaceous FM
Fuel
Fuel
Slope
Wind
Environmental
Topography
Weather
Only applies to dynamic fuel models
38
Differences between static and dynamic models
39
Fosberg and Schroeder, 1971
  • We have made several other assumptions (lacking
    better information) and developed a linear
    equation for the extinction moisture content for
    live fuels.
  • Live Fuel Moisture of Extinction is a function
    of
  • Dead fuel moisture
  • Dead fuel moisture of extinction
  • Ratio of live fuels to total fuel
  • Beware dynamic models

40
Moisture Damping Coefficient (?M)
41
Rapid Increase in Live Fuel Intensity
FB2
GR3
42
Why is this important
  • Live fuels determine potential fire behavior over
    much of the growing season here.
  • The Rothermel surface fire spread model can be
    very sensitive to changes in the ratio of live to
    dead fuel loads, which the new dynamic models can
    cause.
  • Small errors in your input parameter choice could
    lead to large errors in fire behavior predictions
    with some fuel models

43
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44
Effective Windspeed Limit
45
Dynamic fuel models and wind limits
  • Some of the new dynamic models start with very
    little dead fuel loading resulting in low
    reaction intensities
  • With dynamic load transfer, the reaction
    intensity changes as some of the herbaceous fuels
    are shifted into dead fuel categories
  • With this shift, lots of changes occur which can
    result in rapid increase in Reaction intensity.
    Watch the result

46
Effective Windspeed Limit
47
It is possible to select from 53 models
  • Determine the Carrier (GR, GS, SH, TU, TL, SB)
  • Evaluate the need to model herbaceous fuel curing
  • Consider the Moisture of Extinction (Humid or Dry
    Climate)
  • Match the fuel load distribution and loading
  • Evaluate the fire behavior produced by expected
    weather Live Fuel Moisture/Condition

ftp//ftp.dnr.state.mi.us/pub/forestry/FBFuelModel
Parameters.xls
48
Conclusions
  • Simpler tools (FWI, FLAME, CFFBP) may be
    sufficient for many of our small burns with
    mitigated hazards
  • When making projections, always make predictions
    over ranges of conditions rather than a single
    forecast scenario.
  • Know where the effect of live fuel moisture is
    greatest. It may dictate the fire model as well
    as the fuel model you use.
  • Your depiction of live fuels in modeling will
    take skill, judgement, and practice

49
Tools for More Background on New US Fire Behavior
Fuel Models
  • NIFTT training course
  • Help File, spreadsheet, and reference publication
    at FRAMES (Subject Area Fuels)
  • BehavePlus
  • Reference table

www.niftt.gov
www.frames.nbii.gov
www.firemodels.org
50
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