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The Wildland–Urban Interface (WUI): From Simple Models to Mitigating Fire Risk

The Wildland–Urban Interface (WUI): From Simple Models to Mitigating Fire Risk . Michael Ghil Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris, and University of California, Los Angeles V. Spyratos, ENS & ENGREF; P. Bourgeron, INSTAAR, CU, Boulder; and C. Lampin & M. Jappiot, CEMAGREF, Aix-en-Provence.

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The Wildland–Urban Interface (WUI): From Simple Models to Mitigating Fire Risk

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  1. The Wildland–Urban Interface (WUI): From Simple Models to Mitigating Fire Risk Michael Ghil Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris, and University of California, Los Angeles V. Spyratos, ENS & ENGREF; P. Bourgeron, INSTAAR, CU, Boulder; and C. Lampin & M. Jappiot, CEMAGREF, Aix-en-Provence Please see these sites for further details: http://www.environnement.ens.fr/ , http://e2c2.ipsl.jussieu.fr/ http://www.atmos.ucla.edu/tcd/,http://www.aix.cemagref.fr/htmlpub/divisions/afax/emax.htm

  2. Motivation • The WUI occupies about 10% of the surface and contains about 40% of the houses in the conterminous U.S. • Fires have caused huge damages in the WUI in the Western U.S., as well as Southern Europe this past summer and fall. • Further spreading of construction into (semi-)pristine vegetated areas. • Global change seems to increase dryness in the areas of interest. • Actual joint, interactive modeling of housing and vegetation seems to be novel and interesting. • Simple, “toy” models can provide useful ideas. • The hierarchical modeling approach allows one to go back-and-forth between “toy” (conceptual) and detailed (“realistic”) models, and between models and data.

  3. Some spectacular WUI fires A house is threatened by a wall of flames from a wild fire west of the Missionary Ridge fire, north of Durango, Colorado (AP/Charlie Riedel). As Colorado burns in the summer of 2002, flames from a new fire loom menacingly behind a mountain home near Durango (Barry Gutierrez)

  4. A toy model of the WUI A lattice model with nearest-neighbor interactions, already used in forest-fire modeling: novelty is including the houses. Panels (a, b, c) – the central cell is ignited: • it’s a tree stand; • it’s a flammable house; or • It’s a fireproofed house. Panels (d, e) – example of fire spreading over the landscape: red cells are on fire, black cells are burnt; green and yellow cells are unburnt trees and houses.

  5. Fire-spread probability Mean fire size S as a function of p, the vegetation’s probability of fire spread, for different house densities d: d0 indicates fireproofed houses only, d1 flammable houses only.

  6. Fire proofing vs. Fuel treatment Regime diagram of mean fire size S as a function of p and d (d0 or d1): (a) note narrow transition zone between widespread and limited fire size; and (b) higher efficiency of fireproofing of houses.

  7. Application to Mediterranean landscapes Fire distribution over 2 days in Europe: GIS tool

  8. Motivations are similar to Western U.S. Urbanization in a forested area, in the South of France Contexte (6/8)

  9. Continuous, dense Discontinuous, sparse Absent, other Isolated Diffuse Clustered Methodology : Combine 2 criteria Structure of vegetation Structure of habitat

  10. 5 12 10 3 4 7 2 3 7 Cemagref photos Density of fire outbreaks per 1000 ha over the period 1997–2006 Source: fire data ONF C. Lampin, Ph. D. Thesis 2007 Site of Aix

  11. Some conclusions &/or questions What do we know? • It’s getting warmer and drier, which favors forest fires. • Houses spread, which puts more people & goods at risk. • So, we should try to improve fire protection. • Fire proofing entire communities seems to help, both the community and the vegetation in which it is immersed. What do we know less well? • How, exactly, do houses interact with forest fires? • How does climatic change affect this interaction? What to do? • Better understand the system and its forcings. • Use a full hierarchy of forest-fire and climate models to do so.

  12. Some references • Malamud, B.D., G. Morein, D. L. Turcotte, 1998: Forest fires: An example of self-organized critical behavior, Science, 281, 1840–1842. • Hargrove, W.W., R.H. Gardner, M.G. Turner, W.H. Romme, D.G. Despain, 2000: Simulating fire pattern in heterogeneous landscapes, Ecological Modelling, 135, pp 243–263. • Spyratos, V., P. Bourgeron, and M. Ghil, 2007: Development at the wildland–urban interface and the mitigation of forest-fire risks, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA,104: 14272–14276; doi: 10.1073/pnas.0704488104.

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