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- Title
Factors influencing fire suppression success in the province of Quebec (Canada).
- Authors
Cardil, A.; Lorente, M.; Boucher, D.; Boucher, J.; Gauthier, S.
- Abstract
In the managed forest of Canada, forest fires are actively suppressed through efficient initial attack capability; however, the impact of different factors on the suppression success remains to be understood. The aim of this paper was to analyze the influence of operational suppression objectives (fire detection, initial attack, and fire control) along with fire intensity, fuel type, fire ignition cause, year, workload, and homogeneous fire regime zones on the achievement of the fire suppression objective (fire < 3 ha) using the Forest Fire Protection Agency of Quebec (SOPFEU) as a case study. The overall success of the suppression objective was very high (88%) over the study period (1994–2015). Both detection and control had significant effects on the suppression success through their interaction with fuel type, ignition cause, fire intensity, and zone variables. When the suppression objective was not achieved, final fire size was influenced by control, fuel type, fire intensity, and zone. The paper highlights the importance of the operational objectives and of regional differences for both fire suppression success and final fire size. Our results can help forest fire protection agencies to better understand their wildland fire suppression systems for a better adaptation to the upcoming fire regime changes.
- Subjects
FIREFIGHTING; FOREST management; FOREST fire prevention &; control; FUEL &; the environment; FOREST fire research
- Publication
Canadian Journal of Forest Research, 2019, Vol 49, Issue 5, p531
- ISSN
0045-5067
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1139/cjfr-2018-0272