Regional variation in fire weather controls the reported occurrence of Scottish wildfires

PeerJ. 2016 Nov 2:4:e2649. doi: 10.7717/peerj.2649. eCollection 2016.

Abstract

Fire is widely used as a traditional habitat management tool in Scotland, but wildfires pose a significant and growing threat. The financial costs of fighting wildfires are significant and severe wildfires can have substantial environmental impacts. Due to the intermittent occurrence of severe fire seasons, Scotland, and the UK as a whole, remain somewhat unprepared. Scotland currently lacks any form of Fire Danger Rating system that could inform managers and the Fire and Rescue Services (FRS) of periods when there is a risk of increased of fire activity. We aimed evaluate the potential to use outputs from the Canadian Fire Weather Index system (FWI system) to forecast periods of increased fire risk and the potential for ignitions to turn into large wildfires. We collated four and a half years of wildfire data from the Scottish FRS and examined patterns in wildfire occurrence within different regions, seasons, between urban and rural locations and according to FWI system outputs. We used a variety of techniques, including Mahalanobis distances, percentile analysis and Thiel-Sen regression, to scope the best performing FWI system codes and indices. Logistic regression showed significant differences in fire activity between regions, seasons and between urban and rural locations. The Fine Fuel Moisture Code and the Initial Spread Index did a tolerable job of modelling the probability of fire occurrence but further research on fuel moisture dynamics may provide substantial improvements. Overall our results suggest it would be prudent to ready resources and avoid managed burning when FFMC > 75 and/or ISI > 2.

Keywords: Canadian Fire Weather Index system; Fine Fuel Moisture Code; Initial Spread Index; Met Office Fire Severity Index; Moorland; Prescribed burning; United Kingdom; Vegetation management; Wildfire risk; Wildland fire.

Grants and funding

Funding for this research was provided by the Scottish Government through the Scottish Wildfire Forum and by Scottish Natural Heritage. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.