Modelling the meteorological forest fire niche in heterogeneous pyrologic conditions.

Fire regimes are strongly related to weather conditions that directly and indirectly influence fire ignition and propagation. Identifying the most important meteorological fire drivers is thus fundamental for daily fire risk forecasting. In this context, several fire weather indices have been develo...

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Main Authors: Antonella De Angelis, Carlo Ricotta, Marco Conedera, Gianni Boris Pezzatti
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0116875
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spelling doaj-873026e3afbe4ea39176f1f8a1d2e5d82021-03-03T20:10:40ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01102e011687510.1371/journal.pone.0116875Modelling the meteorological forest fire niche in heterogeneous pyrologic conditions.Antonella De AngelisCarlo RicottaMarco ConederaGianni Boris PezzattiFire regimes are strongly related to weather conditions that directly and indirectly influence fire ignition and propagation. Identifying the most important meteorological fire drivers is thus fundamental for daily fire risk forecasting. In this context, several fire weather indices have been developed focussing mainly on fire-related local weather conditions and fuel characteristics. The specificity of the conditions for which fire danger indices are developed makes its direct transfer and applicability problematic in different areas or with other fuel types. In this paper we used the low-to-intermediate fire-prone region of Canton Ticino as a case study to develop a new daily fire danger index by implementing a niche modelling approach (Maxent). In order to identify the most suitable weather conditions for fires, different combinations of input variables were tested (meteorological variables, existing fire danger indices or a combination of both). Our findings demonstrate that such combinations of input variables increase the predictive power of the resulting index and surprisingly even using meteorological variables only allows similar or better performances than using the complex Canadian Fire Weather Index (FWI). Furthermore, the niche modelling approach based on Maxent resulted in slightly improved model performance and in a reduced number of selected variables with respect to the classical logistic approach. Factors influencing final model robustness were the number of fire events considered and the specificity of the meteorological conditions leading to fire ignition.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0116875
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Antonella De Angelis
Carlo Ricotta
Marco Conedera
Gianni Boris Pezzatti
spellingShingle Antonella De Angelis
Carlo Ricotta
Marco Conedera
Gianni Boris Pezzatti
Modelling the meteorological forest fire niche in heterogeneous pyrologic conditions.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Antonella De Angelis
Carlo Ricotta
Marco Conedera
Gianni Boris Pezzatti
author_sort Antonella De Angelis
title Modelling the meteorological forest fire niche in heterogeneous pyrologic conditions.
title_short Modelling the meteorological forest fire niche in heterogeneous pyrologic conditions.
title_full Modelling the meteorological forest fire niche in heterogeneous pyrologic conditions.
title_fullStr Modelling the meteorological forest fire niche in heterogeneous pyrologic conditions.
title_full_unstemmed Modelling the meteorological forest fire niche in heterogeneous pyrologic conditions.
title_sort modelling the meteorological forest fire niche in heterogeneous pyrologic conditions.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Fire regimes are strongly related to weather conditions that directly and indirectly influence fire ignition and propagation. Identifying the most important meteorological fire drivers is thus fundamental for daily fire risk forecasting. In this context, several fire weather indices have been developed focussing mainly on fire-related local weather conditions and fuel characteristics. The specificity of the conditions for which fire danger indices are developed makes its direct transfer and applicability problematic in different areas or with other fuel types. In this paper we used the low-to-intermediate fire-prone region of Canton Ticino as a case study to develop a new daily fire danger index by implementing a niche modelling approach (Maxent). In order to identify the most suitable weather conditions for fires, different combinations of input variables were tested (meteorological variables, existing fire danger indices or a combination of both). Our findings demonstrate that such combinations of input variables increase the predictive power of the resulting index and surprisingly even using meteorological variables only allows similar or better performances than using the complex Canadian Fire Weather Index (FWI). Furthermore, the niche modelling approach based on Maxent resulted in slightly improved model performance and in a reduced number of selected variables with respect to the classical logistic approach. Factors influencing final model robustness were the number of fire events considered and the specificity of the meteorological conditions leading to fire ignition.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0116875
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