Sensitivity of Fire Indicators on Forest Inventory Plots Is Affected by Fire Severity and Time since Burning

Forests Pub Date : 2024-07-20 DOI:10.3390/f15071264
James E. Smith, C. Hoover
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Abstract

Forest inventory data are useful for determining forest stand structure, growth, and change. Among the information collected on forest inventory plots by the USDA Forest Service Forest Inventory and Analysis Program, attributes characterizing various types of disturbance provide researchers a means of selecting plots specifically affected by disturbances, such as fire. We determine the performance of three of these attributes as indicators of recent fires on forest inventory plots of the United States by comparing them to independent records of wildland fire occurrence. The indicators are plot-level observations of fire effects on (1) general site appearance, (2) tree mortality, and (3) damage to live trees. Independent spatial layers of wildland fire perimeters provide an approach to test indicator performance and identify characteristics of fires that may affect detection. The sensitivities of indicators are generally higher in the West relative to the East. Detection rates exceed 90 percent for the Pacific Coast forests but seldom reach 80 percent in the East. Among the individual indicators, site appearance has higher identification rates than tree indicators for fires in the Pacific Coast, Great Plains, North, and South regions. Tree mortality is the most important single indicator for identifying Rocky Mountain fires. Tree damage is more important than tree mortality in the South; otherwise, the tree damage indicator is of relatively lower importance, particularly where high-severity fires are common, and tree survival is low. The rate of detection by the indicators is affected by the severity of the fire or the recency of the fire. The joint effect of severity and recency influence all three indicators for the Pacific Coast and Rocky Mountain fires, as well as the site appearance indicator in the South. Only a small proportion of fires are clearly missed by all three of the indicators.
森林资源调查地块上火灾指标的敏感性受火灾严重程度和燃烧后时间的影响
森林资源调查数据有助于确定林分结构、生长和变化。在美国农业部林务局森林资源清查和分析项目收集的森林资源清查地块信息中,各种类型干扰的特征属性为研究人员提供了一种选择受火灾等干扰影响的具体地块的方法。通过与独立的野外火灾发生记录进行比较,我们确定了其中三个属性作为美国森林资源清查地块近期火灾指标的性能。这些指标是在地块层面观察火灾对以下方面的影响:(1) 一般地块外观;(2) 树木死亡率;(3) 活树损害。野地火灾周界的独立空间层为测试指标性能和确定可能影响检测的火灾特征提供了一种方法。与东部地区相比,西部地区的指标灵敏度普遍较高。太平洋沿岸森林的探测率超过 90%,但东部很少达到 80%。在太平洋沿岸、大平原、北部和南部地区的火灾中,单个指标中,地点外观的识别率要高于树木指标。树木死亡率是识别落基山火灾最重要的单项指标。在南部地区,树木损害比树木死亡率更重要;在其他地区,树木损害指标的重要性相对较低,尤其是在火灾频发、树木存活率较低的地方。指标的检测率受火灾严重程度或火灾发生时间的影响。在太平洋沿岸和落基山火灾中,严重程度和发生时间的共同作用影响了所有三个指标,在南部地区也影响了地貌指标。只有一小部分火灾被所有三个指标明显遗漏。
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