reviewInternational Journal of Wildland FireJun 26, 2003Closed access

A review of prescribed burning effectiveness in fire hazard reduction

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Abstract

Wildfire hazard abatement is one of the major reasons to use prescribed burning. Computer simulation, case studies, and analysis of the fire regime in the presence of active prescribed burning programs in forest and shrubland generally indicate that this fuel management tool facilitates fire suppression efforts by reducing the intensity, size and damage of wildfires. However, the conclusions that can be drawn from the above approaches are limited, highlighting the need for more properly designed experiments addressing this question. Fuel accumulation rate frequently limits prescribed fire effectiveness to a short post-treatment period (2–4 years). Optimisation of the spatial pattern of fire application is…

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714
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Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Prescribed burn
  • Shrubland
  • Fire regime
  • Environmental science
  • Hazard
  • Fire protection
  • Fire hazard
  • Fire prevention
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Climate action
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