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Type: Journal Article
Author(s): Lucia Paci; Alan E. Gelfand; María Asunción Beamonte; Marcos Rodrígues; Fernando Pérez-Cabello
Publication Date: January 2017

Recently, there has been increased interest in the behavior of wildfires. Behavior includes explaining: incidence of wildfires; recurrence times for wildfires; sizes, scars, and directions of wildfires; and recovery of burned regions after a wildfire. We study this last problem. In particular, we use the annual normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) to provide a picture of vegetative levels. Employed post-wildfire, it provides a picture of vegetative recovery. The contribution here is to model post-fire vegetation recovery from a different perspective. What exists in the literature specifies a parametric monotone form for the recovery function and then fits it to the available data. However, recovery need not be monotone; NDVI levels may increase or decrease annually according to climate variables. Furthermore, when there is recovery, it need not follow a simple parametric form. Instead, we view recovery in a relative way. We model what NDVI would look like over the fire scar in the absence of a wildfire. Then, we can examine NDVI recovery locally, employing the observed NDVI recovery at a location relative to the predictive distribution of NDVI at that location. We work with wildfire data from the Communidad Autonomia of Aragn in Spain. We develop our approach in two stages. First, we validate the predictability of NDVI in the absence of wildfire. Then, we study annual recovery and evolution of recovery for an illustrative wildfire region. We work within a hierarchical Bayes framework, adopting suitable dynamic spatial models, attaching full uncertainty to our inference on recovery. © Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2015

Online Links
Citation: Paci, L., A. E. Gelfand, M. A. Beamonte, M. Rodrigues, and F. Perez-Cabello. 2017. Space-time modeling for post-fire vegetation recovery. Stochastic Environmental Research and Risk Assessment, v. 31, no. 1, p. 171-183. 10.1007/s00477-015-1182-6.

Cataloging Information

Regions:
Keywords:
  • dynamic model
  • dynamics
  • fire frequency
  • hierarchical model
  • Indexes
  • Interior Alaska
  • Landsat Tm
  • landscape
  • Markov chain Monte Carlo
  • post fire recovery
  • Quantifying Burn Severity
  • regeneration
  • Spain
  • Spain
  • spatial autoregression
  • wildfire
  • wildfires
Tall Timbers Record Number: 33577Location Status: Not in fileCall Number: AvailableAbstract Status: Fair use, Okay
Record Last Modified:
Record Maintained By: FRAMES Staff (https://www.frames.gov/contact)
FRAMES Record Number: 55525

This bibliographic record was either created or modified by Tall Timbers and is provided without charge to promote research and education in Fire Ecology. The E.V. Komarek Fire Ecology Database is the intellectual property of Tall Timbers.