Wildland Fire Behavior

30
Wildland Fire Behavior

description

Wildland Fire Behavior. Component 1. Fuel-grass, shrub, timber litter, logging slash. 01-02-S390-VG. STAGE OF VEGETATIVE DEVELOPMENT ________________________________________ Fresh foliage, annuals developing early in growing cycle. Maturing foliage, still developing with full turgor. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Wildland Fire Behavior

Page 1: Wildland Fire Behavior

Wildland Fire Behavior

Page 2: Wildland Fire Behavior

Component 1

Fuel-grass, shrub, timber litter, logging slash

01-02-S390-VG

Page 3: Wildland Fire Behavior

LIVE FUEL MOISTURE

01-10-S390-VG

STAGE OF VEGETATIVE DEVELOPMENT________________________________________

Fresh foliage, annuals developing early in growing cycle.

Maturing foliage, still developing with full turgor.

Mature foliage, new growth complete and comparable to older perennial foliage.

Entering dormancy, coloration starting, some leaves may have dropped from stem.

Completely cured.

MOISTURE CONTENT

Percent300

200

100

50

Less than 30, treat as a dead fuel.

Page 4: Wildland Fire Behavior

PROBABILITY OF IGNITION

01-11-S390-VG

A rating of the probability that a glowing firebrand will cause a fire.

Page 5: Wildland Fire Behavior

Wind

10 mi/h

20 mi/h

3 mi/h

20 mi/h

01-13-S390-VG

Page 6: Wildland Fire Behavior

Fuel exposure to windFuel exposure to wind

Partly shelteredPartly sheltered(patchy timber)(patchy timber)

WindWind

Unsheltered (no foliage, Unsheltered (no foliage, near clearings)near clearings)

Fully shelteredFully sheltered(under timber,(under timber,flat or gentle flat or gentle slope, near baseslope, near baseof steep mtn.)of steep mtn.)

Partly shelteredPartly sheltered(under timber(under timbermidslope, windmidslope, windon slope)on slope)

UnshelteredUnsheltered(ridgetops)(ridgetops)

01-14-S390-VG

Page 7: Wildland Fire Behavior

PERCENT SLOPE

01-16-S390-VG

% SLOPE = RISE IN FEETRUN IN FEET

X 100 %

RISE

RUN

Page 8: Wildland Fire Behavior

A MATHEMATICAL MODEL IS A SET OF

EQUATIONS

02-04-S390-VG

Page 9: Wildland Fire Behavior

ASSUMPTIONS OF THE FIRE SPREAD MODEL

02-05-S390-VG

1. Fire is spreading at the flame front.

2. Fire is free burning.

3. Fine fuels control rate of spread.

4. Uniform and continuous fuels.

5. Surface fire.

6. Uniform weather and topography.

Page 10: Wildland Fire Behavior

RATE OF SPREADDISTANCE/TIME

02-09-S390-VG

STARTING TIME

TIME

ENDING TIME

DISTANCE

Page 11: Wildland Fire Behavior

FLAME LENGTHFEET

02-12-S390-VG

Page 12: Wildland Fire Behavior

POINT SOURCE

02-15-S390-VG

Point source model is designated for firesburning on flat ground or where the wind is blowing in the direction of the slope plus

or minus 30°.

upslope

max

slop

e

± 30º

Page 13: Wildland Fire Behavior

SPREAD CALCULATION

SD=PT X ROS

SD = SPREAD DISTANCEPT= PROJECTION TIMEROS = RATE OF SPREAD

02-16-S390-VG

Page 14: Wildland Fire Behavior

SPREAD DIRECTION

02-18-S390-VG

WIN

D

NO

WIN

D

WIN

DUP

SLOPEUP

SLOPEUP

SLOPE

WIN

D

DOWN SLOPE

DOWN SLOPE

DOWN SLOPE

Page 15: Wildland Fire Behavior

POINT SOURCE PREDICTION LIMITATIONS

02-21-S390-VG

Calculations with windspeeds less than 2.5 miles per hour are generally too low.

Better predictions result withwindspeeds greater than 2.5 milesper hour.

Page 16: Wildland Fire Behavior

FIRE PERIMETER AND SHAPES

02-23-S390-VG

Fire perimeter and shapes are based on smooth ellipses - actual perimeter of the fire edge would likely be greater length and follow topographic relief.

Page 17: Wildland Fire Behavior

APPROXIMATE FIRE SHAPES ASSOCIATED WITH MIDFLAME

WINDSPEEDS OF…..

02-24-S390-VG

Wind Direction

Fire Start

2.5 mi/h

5 mi/h

7.5 mi/h

15 mi/h

10 mi/h

Page 18: Wildland Fire Behavior

AREAS OF USE SUPPRESSION

02-25-S390-VG

Determination of locations to place crews,equipment, helicopters and fuel breaks.

Development of the wildland fire situation analysis.

Page 19: Wildland Fire Behavior

PRESCRIBED BURNING

02-27-S390-VG

Distance between spot fires to accomplishan objective.

Calculating timing of ignition to take advantage of diurnal weather patterns.

Managing wilderness fires.

Development of escaped fire contingencyplanning.

Page 20: Wildland Fire Behavior

EFFECTIVE WINDSPEED

02-37-S390-VG

The midflame adjusted for the effectof slope on uphill fire spread.

Page 21: Wildland Fire Behavior

EXAMPLES OF EFFECTIVE WINDSPEED

02-38-S390-VG

EFFECTIVE WINDSPEEDIS 5 mi/h

3 mi/h

60%5 mi/h

Page 22: Wildland Fire Behavior

MAXIMUM SPOTTING DISTANCE

02-43-S390-VG

When torching trees, piles or wind-driven surface fires loft firebrands,which are then carried by the prevailing wind.

Page 23: Wildland Fire Behavior

SOURCES OF FIREBRAND

02-44-S390-VG

•Torching trees

•Burning pile

•Spreading surface fire

Page 24: Wildland Fire Behavior

FACTORS RELATING TO THE SPOTTING PROBLEM

02-45-S390-VG

•Probability of production of firebrands.

•Windspeed.

•Fire intensity.

•Number of firebrands

Page 25: Wildland Fire Behavior

Dispatching Priorities

03-05-S390-VG

FUELSWEATHER

TOPOGRAPHY

Page 26: Wildland Fire Behavior

Predicting “Real Time” Fire Behavior

Running Surface Fire

Wildland Fire Situation Analysis(WFSA)

03-06-S390-VG

Page 27: Wildland Fire Behavior

Prescribed Burning

03-07-S390-VG

•Estimate the behavior of escapes or spots.

•Assess fuel and weather conditions at burn time.

•Develop burn prescriptions.

•Develop containment and control plans.

Page 28: Wildland Fire Behavior

FIRE PLANNING

03-09-S390-VG

•Preattack

•Describing consequences

•Environmental documents

Page 29: Wildland Fire Behavior

Rate of Spread =

03-28-S390-VG

Spread DistanceElapsed Time

Page 30: Wildland Fire Behavior

FLAME LENGTH*

03-30-S390-VG

Indicator of intensity

Observable

*Remember flame length is not equal to flame height.