Journal article

Visual assessments of fuel loads are poorly related to destructively sampled fuel loads in eucalypt forests

L Volkova, AL Sullivan, SH Roxburgh, CJ Weston

International Journal of Wildland Fire | CSIRO PUBLISHING | Published : 2016

Abstract

Fire managers around the world commonly use visual assessment of forest fuels to aid prediction of fire behaviour and plan for hazard reduction burning. In Australia, fuel hazard assessment guides also allow conversion of visual assessments to indicative fuel loads, which is essential for some rate of spread models and calculation of fireline intensity or emissions. The strength of correlation between fuel hazard and destructively sampled (directly measured) fuel load was tested using a comprehensive dataset of >500 points from across a range of eucalypt forests in Australia. Overall, there was poor correlation between the assigned fuel hazard rating and measured biomass for surface, near-su..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

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Funding Acknowledgements

The authors would like to acknowledge funding from CSIRO. The NSW Rural Fire Service and Melissa O'Halloran provided data and photographs on the project "Assessment of Fuel Loads by Remote Sensing' (NSW Rural Fire Service 2007). The authors express their appreciation to Dr Miguel Cruz, Dr Lachie McCaw, Dr Sadanandan Nambiar and two anonymous reviewers for their valuable comments on the manuscript.