Project
QUEST Theme 3- Fire Modelling and Forecasting System (FireMAFS)
Abstract
Fire was the most important disturbance agent worldwide in terms of area and variety of biomass affected, a major mechanism by which carbon is transferred from the land to the atmosphere, and a globally significant source of aerosols and many trace gas species. Despite such clear coupling between fire, climate, and vegetation, fire was not modelled as an interactive component of the climate/earth systems models of full complexity or intermediate complexity, that are used to model terrestrial ecosystem processes principally for simulating CO2 exchanges.
The objective of FireMAFS was to resolve these limitations by developing a robust method to forecast fire activity (fire 'danger' indices, ignition probabilities, burnt area, fire intensity etc), via a process-based model of fire-vegetation interactions, tested, improved, and constrained. This used a state-of-the-art EO data products and driven by seasonal weather forecasts issued with many months lead-time.
FireMAFS was led by Prof Martin Wooster (Kings College, London) with 9 co-investigators from UCL, University of Leicester, University of Reading, ESSC, University of Bristol and CEH.
Details
Keywords: | QUEST, FireMAFS, Fire, modelling, forecasting |
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Previously used record identifiers: |
http://badc.nerc.ac.uk/view/badc.nerc.ac.uk__ATOM__ACTIVITY_e09e45ec-2eed-11e0-b4a6-00221914d1cf
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