2014
DOI: 10.1002/env.2269
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Wildfire risk estimation in the Mediterranean area

Abstract: We analyzed wildland fire occurrence and size data from Sardinia, Italy, and Corsica, France, to examine spatiotemporal patterns of fire occurrence in relation to weather, land use, anthropogenic features, and time of year. Fires on these islands are largely human caused and can be attributed to negligence, agro‐pastoral land use, and arson. Of particular interest was the predictive value of a fire weather index (FWI) that is widely used by fire managers to alert suppression crews. We found that an increase in… Show more

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Cited by 106 publications
(87 citation statements)
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“…Fire occurrence analysis in Mediterranean areas is a prerequisite for fire modeling, since most fires are associated with anthropic activities (Martínez et al 2009;Padilla and Vega-García 2011;Ager et al 2014b; e.g., lightning caused just *2 % fires in the study area) and exhibit spatial-temporal ignition patterns that must be taken into account for accurate fire modeling (Bar-Massada et al 2011;Salis et al 2014Salis et al , 2015. The anthropic causes of fire ignition are often unknown (45 % in the study area; Fig.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Fire occurrence analysis in Mediterranean areas is a prerequisite for fire modeling, since most fires are associated with anthropic activities (Martínez et al 2009;Padilla and Vega-García 2011;Ager et al 2014b; e.g., lightning caused just *2 % fires in the study area) and exhibit spatial-temporal ignition patterns that must be taken into account for accurate fire modeling (Bar-Massada et al 2011;Salis et al 2014Salis et al , 2015. The anthropic causes of fire ignition are often unknown (45 % in the study area; Fig.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the Mediterranean areas, fire ignition location alone is a poor estimator of burned area, but fire spread modeling must account for historical ignition occurrence since anthropic activities are responsible for spatial-temporal ignition patterns (Bar-Massada et al 2011;Ager et al 2014b;Salis et al 2014Salis et al , 2015. Wildfires can be accurately and massively replicated using fire modeling programs such as FlamMap, FSim or Randig (Finney 2006), which are built on the computationally feasible and efficient minimum travel time (MTT) fire spread algorithm (Finney 2002).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…central Africa) or differ seasonally (e.g. United Kingdom, Albertson et al 2009) -there is a well-defined seasonality in some regions with a high peak of fire occurrence in summer (Ager et al 2014), whereas in others there are two well-defined peaks of fire frequency, for example in early winter and summer (Martell et al 1989). Accordingly, some models only consider fire observations recorded during a fire season defined by the period with the highest number of fires (Haines et al 1970;Vega-Garcia et al 1995, 1996Dickson et al 2006;Vilar et al 2010).…”
Section: Temporal Span For Modellingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therefore, employing suitable tools and techniques to model this stochasticity in the decision-making process for effective preparedness and response to disasters is essential. Regarding wildfires, the need for such tools has led to the development of several prediction models (Martínez et al 2009;Thompson and Calkin 2011;Ager et al 2014) that focus on explaining spatial-temporal patterns with regard to certain variables (physiographic, infrastructural, socio-economic and weather-related) relating to the ignition of wildfires. However, in the literature, few studies incorporating wildfire propagation and logistics planning for disaster relief, revealing a research gap concerning appropriate solutions for these types of logistic problems.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%