Factors affecting fuel break effectiveness in the control of large fires on the Los Padres National Forest, California
Alexandra D. Syphard A D , Jon E. Keeley B C and Teresa J. Brennan BA Conservation Biology Institute, 10423 Sierra Vista Avenue, La Mesa, CA 91941, USA.
B US Geological Survey, Western Ecological Research Center, Sequoia–Kings Canyon Field Station, Three Rivers, CA 93271, USA.
C Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1606, USA.
D Corresponding author. Email: asyphard@consbio.org
International Journal of Wildland Fire 20(6) 764-775 https://doi.org/10.1071/WF10065
Submitted: 30 June 2010 Accepted: 4 January 2011 Published: 1 September 2011
Abstract
As wildfires have increased in frequency and extent, so have the number of homes developed in the wildland–urban interface. In California, the predominant approach to mitigating fire risk is construction of fuel breaks, but there has been little empirical study of their role in controlling large fires. We constructed a spatial database of fuel breaks on the Los Padres National Forest in southern California to better understand characteristics of fuel breaks that affect the behaviour of large fires and to map where fires and fuel breaks most commonly intersect. We evaluated whether fires stopped or crossed over fuel breaks over a 28-year period and compared the outcomes with physical characteristics of the sites, weather and firefighting activities during the fire event. Many fuel breaks never intersected fires, but others intersected several, primarily in historically fire-prone areas. Fires stopped at fuel breaks 46% of the time, almost invariably owing to fire suppression activities. Firefighter access to treatments, smaller fires and longer fuel breaks were significant direct influences, and younger vegetation and fuel break maintenance indirectly improved the outcome by facilitating firefighter access. This study illustrates the importance of strategic location of fuel breaks because they have been most effective where they provided access for firefighting activities.
Additional keywords: chaparral, firefighter, mapping, pre-fire fuel treatment, southern California, strategic location, structural equation model, suppression, wildland–urban interface.
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