overview of the Fuel Characteristic Classification System -- Quantifying, classifying, and creating fuelbeds for resource planning

We present an overview of the Fuel Characteristic Classification System (FCCS), a tool that enables land managers, regulators, and scientists to create and catalogue fuelbeds and to classify those fuelbeds for their capacity to support fire and consume fuels. The fuelbed characteristics and fire cla...

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Veröffentlicht in:Canadian journal of forest research 2007-12, Vol.37 (12), p.2383-2393
Hauptverfasser: Ottmar, R.D, Sandberg, D.V, Riccardi, C.L, Prichard, S.J
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container_end_page 2393
container_issue 12
container_start_page 2383
container_title Canadian journal of forest research
container_volume 37
creator Ottmar, R.D
Sandberg, D.V
Riccardi, C.L
Prichard, S.J
description We present an overview of the Fuel Characteristic Classification System (FCCS), a tool that enables land managers, regulators, and scientists to create and catalogue fuelbeds and to classify those fuelbeds for their capacity to support fire and consume fuels. The fuelbed characteristics and fire classification from this tool will provide inputs for current and future sophisticated models for the quantification of fire behavior, fire effects, and carbon accounting and enable assessment of fuel treatment effectiveness. The system was designed from requirements provided by land managers, scientists, and policy makers gathered through six regional workshops. The FCCS contains a set of fuelbeds representing the United States, which were compiled from scientific literature, fuels photo series, fuels data sets, and expert opinion. The system enables modification and enhancement of these fuelbeds to represent a particular scale of interest. The FCCS then reports assigned and calculated fuel characteristics for each existing fuelbed stratum including the canopy, shrubs, nonwoody, woody, litter-lichen-moss, and duff. Finally, the system classifies each fuelbed by calculating fire potentials that provide an index of the intrinsic capacity of each fuelbed to support surface fire behavior, support crown fire, and provide fuels for flaming, smoldering, and residual consumption. The FCCS outputs are being used in a national wildland fire emissions inventory and in the development of fuelbed, fire hazard, and treatment effectiveness maps on several national forests. Although the FCCS was built for the United States, the conceptual framework is applicable worldwide.
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ispartof Canadian journal of forest research, 2007-12, Vol.37 (12), p.2383-2393
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source Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Analysis
Canada
Carbon footprint
Classification
Control
ecoregions
Effectiveness
Emission inventories
Emissions
Environmental accounting
Environmental aspects
Environmental cleanup
Environmental policy
fire hazard
Fire hazards
fire potentials
Forest & brush fires
Forest fires
Forest management
Forest reserves
Fuel
fuel characteristics
fuelbed classification
Fuels
Geospatial data
Land management
Methods
National forests
Oregon
Scientists
Sustainability reporting
vegetation
wildfire fuels
Wildfires
wildland fire management
title overview of the Fuel Characteristic Classification System -- Quantifying, classifying, and creating fuelbeds for resource planning
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