Fr. 149.00

Forest Fires - Behavior and Ecological Effects

English · Hardback

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Informationen zum Autor Edward A. Johnson is a Professor of Biological Sciences Ecology & Evolutionary Biology at the University of Calgary, Canada and up until June 2018, he was also the Director of the Biogeoscience Institute. His research interests are wildfires, avalanches, hillslope and fluvial geomorphic processes, climate, landuse, and other processes as they affect tree populations. He is particularly interested in the explicit coupling of the physical processes to ecological processes. He has over 114 publications and 4,693 total citations. Kiyoko Miyanishi is a Professor Emeritus at the University of Guelph, having retired in 2005. She has edited 2 books, written 11 book chapters and has over 30 publications and 1,200 citations. Klappentext Even before the myth of Prometheus! fire played a crucial ecological role around the world. Numerous plant communities depend on fire to generate species diversity in both time and space. Without fire such ecosystems would become sterile monocultures. Recent efforts to prohibit fire in fire dependent communities have contributed to more intense and more damaging fires. For these reasons! foresters! ecologists! land managers! geographers! and environmental scientists are interested in the behavior and ecological effects of fires. This book will be the first to focus on the chemistry and physics of fire as it relates to the ways in which fire behaves and the impacts it has on ecosystem function. Leading international contributors have been recruited by the editors to prepare a didactic text/reference that will appeal to both advanced students and practicing professionals. Zusammenfassung Foresters! ecologists! land managers! geographers! and environmental scientists are interested in the behaviour and ecological effects of fires. This book focuses on the chemistry and physics of fire as it relates to the ways in which fire behaves and the impacts it has on ecosystem function. ...

List of contents


Contributors

Preface

Acknowledgments

1 Strengthening Fire Ecology's Roots

I. Introduction

II. Processes

III. Transfer Rates and Budgets

IV. Examples of Traditional vs. Proposed Approach

References

2 Flames

I. Introduction

II. Basic Aspects of Combustion in Forest Fires

III. Temperature, Velocity, Species Concentration, and Flame Height

IV Premixed and Diffusion Flames

V. Extinction of Diffusion Flames

VI. Diffusion Flames and Scaling Analysis

VII. Spreading Flames

VIII. Structure of Flame Base

IX. Conclusions

Notation

References

3 Combustion Chemistry and Smoke

I. Introduction

II. Fuel Chemistry and Combustion

III. Smoke Production

IV. Minimizing Smoke Production

V. Conclusions

References

4 Water Relations of Forest Fuels

I. Introduction

II. Forest Fuels

III. Fuel Moisture Relationships

IV. Moisture Content Estimation

Notation

Additional Reading

References

5 Wildland Fire Spread Models

I. Introduction

II. Head Fire Rate of Spread (Physical Principles and their Mathematical Embodiment)

III. Head Fire Rate of Spread: Australia

IV. Head Fire Rate of Spread: United States

V. Head Fire Rate of Spread: Canada

VI. Smoldering

VII. Whole Fire Modeling-Fire Shape

Notation

References

6 Wind-Aided Fire Spread

I. Introduction

II. Laboratory-Scale Setup

III. Fire Spread Model

IV. Preliminary Testing of the Model

V. Test Results for the Effect of Wind Speed and Fuel Loading on the Rate of Fire Spread

VI. Conclusions

Notation

Recommended Reading

References

7 Fire Plumes

I. Introduction

II. Modeling Fire Temperature Maxima

III. Plumes above Fires in a Cross Wind

Notation

References

8 Coupling Atmospheric and Fire Models

I. Introduction

II. Vorticity Dynamics in a Fire

III. Coupling between Atmosphere and Fire

IV. The Elements of Fire Modeling

V. Modeling the Atmosphere

VI. The Coupled Fire-Atmosphere Modeling Approach

VII. Idealized Studies of Wildfire Behavior

VIII. Infrared Observations of Fires

IX. Conclusions and Future Work

Appendix I. Circulation and Vorticity

Appendix II. Development of Vertical Rotation in a Frictionless Fluid

Appendix III. Generation of Vertical Motion in Rotating Convective Cells

Notation

References

9 Surface Energy Budget and Fuel Moisture

I. Introduction

II. Evapotranspiration Processes and the Meteorological Controlling Factors

III. Estimation of Potential Evapotranspiration Rates

IV. Functional Dependence of PET and AET

V. Characteristics of PET

VI. Near-Surface Environment

VII. Models of Land-Surface Interactions

VIII. Remote Sensing of the Surface Energy Budget

IX. Fire Weather Rating Systems

Notation

Suggested Reading List

References

10 Climate, Weather, and Area Burned

I. Introduction

II. Weather and Area Burned-Synoptic Surface Features

III. Weather and Area Burned-Upper Air Features

IV. Teleconnections

V. Future Warming

Report

"...a rich summary of our current knowledge of several important aspects of forest fire science, from fuel dynamics to coupled atmosphere-fire modelling. ...The book's strength is as a state-of-the-art review of research on pyrolysis, flames, lightening, fuel-moisture dynamics, smoke, combustion chemistry, and more. ...My fire science students and colleagues use Forest Fires as a reference." --Daniel Nepstad, Woods Hole Research Center, in NATURE (January 2002)

"...a primary strength of this book is that you can find a larger number of state-of-the-art fire behavior and combustion topics covered in a single source. ...the book is an unmitigated success...a very strong book that will benefit most scientists interested in fire, including ecologists. ...Overall, I compliment the editors and authors for a job well done." --Marc D. Abrams, Pennsylvania State University, School of Forest Resources, in ECOLOGY (November 2001)

"This book is authoritative, well written and abundantly referenced. ...a valuable resource on all the topics covered and is likely to remain so for many years. ...It is a book that researchers in fire ecology should be aware of and have access to." --John Ogden in ANNALS OF BOTANY (2001)

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