2nd International Wildland Fire Ecology and Fire Management Congress

P5.3

Ignition behavior of live California chaparral leaves

Steven G. Smith, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT; and J. D. Engstrom, J. K. Butler, L. L. Baxter, T. H. Fletcher, and D. R. Weise

Current forest fire models are largely empirical correlations based on data from beds of dead vegetation. Improvement in model capabilities is sought by developing models of the combustion of live fuels. A facility was developed to determine the combustion behavior of small samples of live fuels, consisting of a flat-flame burner on a moveable platform and a horizontal balance. Qualitative and quantitative combustion data are presented for representative samples of California chaparral (manzanita, scrub oak, hoaryleaf ceanothus, and chamise). Ignition temperature data for each sample type followed a bell shape curve, whereas time to ignition data varied based on the sample non-uniformity.

extended abstract  Extended Abstract (312K)

Poster Session 5, Fire Behavior
Monday, 17 November 2003, 6:00 PM-6:00 PM

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