From the text ... 'The Canadian Parks Service has a fire management policy that is best described as evolving. The development history of the fire policy and current practices have been reviewed by other authors (Lopoukhine, 1993; Westhaver, 1992...

- 1988
- 1964
- International
- 1997
- 1995
Fire Behavior Portal
The fire behavior topic page contains resources and activities related to the study and management of the direction, spread and intensity of wildland fire.
Highlighted Content

Wildland Fire Library (firelibrary.org)
The Wildland Fire Library (firelibrary.org) is a collection of long-term assessments, fire progressions, fire behavior reports, and other documents and resources to support fire modeling and assessment of long-duration fires. Each file is tied to some event with a location, a start date, and background information. This site is operated by Rick Stratton and Jim Edmonds of the USFS National Office.
Upcoming Events
- Related FRAMES Sites
- Catalog Records
- Current Announcements and Jobs
- Upcoming Events
- Past Events













Filter Results
Region
- Alaska (39) Apply Alaska filter
- California (40) Apply California filter
- Eastern (39) Apply Eastern filter
- Great Basin (41) Apply Great Basin filter
- Hawaii (39) Apply Hawaii filter
- (-) Remove International filter International
- National (38) Apply National filter
- Northern Rockies (39) Apply Northern Rockies filter
- (-) Remove Northwest filter Northwest
- Rocky Mountain (40) Apply Rocky Mountain filter
- Southern (40) Apply Southern filter
- Southwest (39) Apply Southwest filter
- Unknown (1) Apply Unknown filter
Year
- 2020 (34) Apply 2020 filter
- 2019 (36) Apply 2019 filter
- 2018 (34) Apply 2018 filter
- 2017 (27) Apply 2017 filter
- 2016 (27) Apply 2016 filter
- 2015 (26) Apply 2015 filter
- 2014 (36) Apply 2014 filter
- 2013 (28) Apply 2013 filter
- 2012 (17) Apply 2012 filter
- 2011 (24) Apply 2011 filter
- 2010 (29) Apply 2010 filter
- 2009 (45) Apply 2009 filter
- 2008 (36) Apply 2008 filter
- 2007 (32) Apply 2007 filter
- 2006 (41) Apply 2006 filter
- 2005 (56) Apply 2005 filter
- 2004 (82) Apply 2004 filter
- 2003 (70) Apply 2003 filter
- 2002 (48) Apply 2002 filter
- 2001 (33) Apply 2001 filter
- 2000 (59) Apply 2000 filter
- 1999 (27) Apply 1999 filter
- 1998 (28) Apply 1998 filter
- (-) Remove 1997 filter 1997
- 1996 (18) Apply 1996 filter
- (-) Remove 1995 filter 1995
- 1994 (24) Apply 1994 filter
- 1993 (15) Apply 1993 filter
- 1992 (8) Apply 1992 filter
- 1991 (24) Apply 1991 filter
- 1990 (15) Apply 1990 filter
- 1989 (20) Apply 1989 filter
- (-) Remove 1988 filter 1988
- 1987 (10) Apply 1987 filter
- 1986 (8) Apply 1986 filter
- 1985 (13) Apply 1985 filter
- 1984 (6) Apply 1984 filter
- 1983 (12) Apply 1983 filter
- 1982 (14) Apply 1982 filter
- 1981 (12) Apply 1981 filter
- 1980 (10) Apply 1980 filter
- 1979 (5) Apply 1979 filter
- 1978 (11) Apply 1978 filter
- 1977 (7) Apply 1977 filter
- 1976 (12) Apply 1976 filter
- 1975 (7) Apply 1975 filter
- 1974 (10) Apply 1974 filter
- 1973 (9) Apply 1973 filter
- 1972 (11) Apply 1972 filter
- 1971 (17) Apply 1971 filter
- 1970 (8) Apply 1970 filter
- 1969 (5) Apply 1969 filter
- 1968 (5) Apply 1968 filter
- 1967 (3) Apply 1967 filter
- 1966 (3) Apply 1966 filter
- 1965 (7) Apply 1965 filter
- (-) Remove 1964 filter 1964
- 1963 (4) Apply 1963 filter
- 1962 (1) Apply 1962 filter
- 1961 (3) Apply 1961 filter
- 1960 (1) Apply 1960 filter
- 1959 (2) Apply 1959 filter
- 1958 (1) Apply 1958 filter
- 1956 (2) Apply 1956 filter
- 1954 (1) Apply 1954 filter
- 1952 (2) Apply 1952 filter
- 1950 (1) Apply 1950 filter
- 1949 (1) Apply 1949 filter
- 1947 (1) Apply 1947 filter
- 1944 (1) Apply 1944 filter
- 1943 (1) Apply 1943 filter
- 1941 (1) Apply 1941 filter
- 1940 (1) Apply 1940 filter
- 1938 (1) Apply 1938 filter
- 1915 (1) Apply 1915 filter
[no description entered]
There are areas in the boreal forest where the combination of highly flammable vagetation and frequent ignition events create a high fire hazard. The resultant fires cause considerable economic and social damage. During global change, fire frequency...
Holocene fossil pollen data of fine temporal and spatial resolution were obtained from two small, closed lake basins in southern Ontario, Canada. Forest development is recorded in the pollen sequences, which document the invasion and expansion of tree...
The Forest Vegetation Simulator (FVS), coupled with a new key to structural classes, provided an empirical link between the Columbia River Basin SUccessional Model (CRBSUM) and the real world. The essence of CRBSUM is a set of residence times and...
A metric variant of Prognosis (also known as the Forest Vegetation Simulator) has been linked to the Western Root Disease extension, and used to explore the interaction between partial harvesting, Armillaria root disease and productivity in 24...
The Boreal Mixedwood Ecosystem Study near Thunder Bay, Ontario is a multi-disciplinary investigation of the impacts of harvesting and fire on the structure and function of a boreal mixed-wood ecosystem. The fire component comprises a set of treatments...
[no description entered]
A probabilistic model is offered for tracing the fate of vegetation communities in fire-prone lands that are subjected to regular fuel reduction burning. The model is based on the semi-Markov process (an extension of Markov chain modelling). The inputs...
The subalpine vegetation zone is an extensive and important high elevation setting in the western United States. Whitebark pine (Pinus albicaulis) is restricted to, and occurs widely in, the subalpine zone. This tree provides a valuable foodsource and...
A one-year postdoctoral position, with the possibility of extension for an additional year depending on performance evaluation and funding, is available to join an interdisciplinary research teaching effort focused on Cross-Scale Fire Ecophysiology.
The University of Idaho is hiring a full-time, post-doctoral researcher (based in Missoula, MT) to investigate linkages between wildland fire behavior and resulting ecological effects at micro- to macro- biological scales. The goal is to utilize these linkages for improvements to computational fluid dynamic fire models. The post-doctoral researcher will primarily investigate factors influencing thermal tolerance of plant tissue to heating associated with wildland fire. The position is a collaboration between the University of Idaho, USDA Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station, and Los Alamos National Laboratory to conduct research on thermal tolerance and dose-dependent responses of plants and aerosolized microbiota that can be incorporated into computational fluid dynamics models to predict fire effects across pedosphere, biosphere, and atmosphere boundaries.
Evaluation of applicants began on December 7, 2020, and will continue until the position is filled.
The College of Geosciences at Texas A&M University in College Station, TX invites applications for two (2) Geoscience Future Faculty (GFF) Postdoctoral Research Associate Fellowships. This competitive fellowship is open to individuals who aspire to develop research programs of their own as faculty members. The College of Geosciences is one of the nation’s most comprehensive Earth-system colleges and is committed to the discovery, advancement and application of knowledge fundamental to understanding our planet and its resources for a sustainable future. The College's disciplinary research and educational excellence are built on cutting-edge analyses and observations, numerical simulations and theoretical studies, and field-based data collection at all spatial and temporal scales.
The Department of Natural Resource Ecology and Management (NREM) at Oklahoma State University invites applications for a full-time, eleven-month, tenure-track position (75% Research and 25% Teaching) in fire modeling. The department is seeking a candidate to contribute to research related to understanding wildland fire behavior and risk in Oklahoma and the United States. Application and/or development of models to understand fire behavior at multiple spatial scales is required. Possible outcomes of research include improved management of fuels and smoke with prescribed fire, reduction of wildfire risk and mitigation of its effects to infrastructure, reduced impacts of smoke on human health, and improved ecosystem function. The successful candidate is expected to work closely with multidisciplinary faculty in natural resources, climatology, social science, and engineering to meet the needs of diverse stakeholder groups.
Review of applications will begin December 15, 2020, and will continue until a suitable candidate is identified. The position will be filled by June 1, 2021, or as soon thereafter as an outstanding candidate is available.
On April 6, 2020, the Fire Management Board (FMB) established the Wildland Fire Medical and Public Health Advisory Team (MPHAT) to address medical and health-related issues specific to the interagency administration of mission critical wildland fire management functions under a COVID-19 modified operating posture. The COVID-19 MPHAT is tasked with providing medical and public health expertise, advice, coordination, and collaboration with external subject matter experts and developing protocols and practices for all aspects of COVID-19 planning, prevention, and mitigation for wildland fire operations. Guidance found on this page has been issued via FMB Memorandum. They may be updated as appropriate and necessary to respond to the evolving situations and work conditions surrounding COVID-19.
With multiple agencies/entities, groups and task forces all working to find solutions for operational concerns surrounding the coronavirus pandemic, the need for a space to share information is apparent. This forum serves as a platform to ask questions, as well as to share ideas, information, and solutions.
Presenter: Dr. Molly Hunter, USGS SW Climate Adaptation Science Center, Research Manager / Joint Fire Science Program, Science Advisor
Sponsor: Southwest Fire Science Consortium
Prescribed fire can result in significant benefits to...
Host: Rocky Mountain Research Station
Presenters: Greg Dillon and Sean Parks
Area burned by wildland fire has been increasing since the mid-1980s across much of the US. But the effects of fire on vegetation and soil – what we call burn...
The leadership of the NASA Arctic-Boreal Vulnerability Experiment (ABoVE) plans to convene their 7th Science Team Meeting May 10-13, 2021, in person if possible in Fairbanksat UAF, as they originally intended in 2020. Recordings and posters from the...
A Virtual Conference, for Real World Problems
Join the International Association of Wildland Fire (IAWF) on a trip around the world through the lens of wildland fire. Across four days in May 2021, the IAWF will present real world risks and...
Save the Date!
The 9th International Fire Ecology and Management Congress, hosted by the Association for Fire Ecology in cooperation with Tall Timbers, will be held in the Florida Panhandle at Sandestin Golf and Beach Resort,...
Description
Format: 3-day WebEx workshop, 2h/day comprising 3-5min. lightning presentations followed by breakout discussions and follow-on writing sessions
Outcomes: Collaboration, Review paper (submission May 2021)
Day 1:...
Description
Format: 3-day WebEx workshop, 2h/day comprising 3-5min. lightning presentations followed by breakout discussions and follow-on writing sessions
Outcomes: Collaboration, Review paper (submission May 2021)
Day 1:...
Format: 3-day WebEx workshop, 2h/day comprising 3-5min. lightning presentations followed by breakout discussions and follow-on writing sessions
Outcomes: Collaboration, Review paper (submission May 2021)
Day 1: Jan 12, 12-2pm MST...
Sponsors: LANDFIRE & The Nature Conservancy
Presenter: Greg Dillon, Spatial Fire Analyst, U.S. Forest Service
Burn severity is the ecological change resulting from wildland fires. Areas burned with high severity are of concern to land...
Sponsors: National Weather Service, North Carolina Climate Office, the Southern Fire Exchange, North Carolina Prescribed Fire Council, the Joint Fire Science Program, and the University of Florida.
Presenters:...
All invited, members and non-members - invite a colleague
This will not be your typical AGM - it will be informative AND fun! Join the International Association of Wildland Fire (IAWF) to network with other members, learn more about IAWF...
College of Science Discover Science at Home Lecture - University of Nevada, Reno
Dr. Neil Lareau
Assistant Professor, Department of Physics
Dr. Lareau is an assistant professor in the Department of Physics at the University of...
This is the third of a five-webinar series. The sagebrush steppe is one of the largest ecosystems in North America and one of the most threatened due to human land use conversions, non-native plant invasions, and wildfire. This virtual series will...
Catastrophic wildfires, sometimes called “megafires,” are more and more common in the western United States. California in particular is increasingly thought of as having a year-round (24/7/365) fire season. These megafires ignore boundaries, require...
Hosted by NC State University’s State Climate Office of North Carolina (SCONC) and the North Carolina Institute for Climate Studies (NCICS)
Join the hosts for this webinar series to learn more about climate change in North Carolina. The series...