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Author(s):
Melanie J. Wheatley, Joshua M. Johnston, B. Mike Wotton, Douglas G. Woolford, David L. Martell
Year Published:

Cataloging Information

Topic(s):
Fire Intensity / Burn Severity
Fire & Fuels Modeling
Suppression treatments
Management Approaches

NRFSN number: 27515
FRAMES RCS number: 70234
Record updated:

Background

Suppression effectiveness is often evaluated by measuring the extent to which it slows fire spread and reduces fireline intensity. Although studies have used infrared (IR) imaging methods to explore suppression effectiveness, most do not measure or assess the influence of water application on energy release.

Aims

This preliminary analysis uses IR imagery to quantify the impact of suppression on fire behaviour and the reduction in energy released from a flaming fire.

Methods

We conducted a series of small-scale experimental burns representative of pine and grass surface litter in the Canadian boreal forest and suppressed these fires while actively monitoring fire behaviour with overhead IR imagery. We used detailed measurements of fire radiative power to estimate fire radiative energy density, forward rate of spread and fireline intensity.

Key results

We observed changes in fire behaviour due to suppression, quantified the duration of those reductions and detected a suppression signal through an analysis of radiative energy during the flaming combustion phase.

Conclusions

IR methodology is able to capture the changes in energy released from a fire due to known aspects of water application.

Implications

Our findings can inform methodologies for field studies on suppression effectiveness, where ground sampling techniques are impractical but airborne IR methods can be employed.

Citation

Wheatley, Melanie; Johnston, Joshua M.; Wotton, B. Mike; Woolford, Douglas G.; Martell, David L. 2025. Assessing wildland fire suppression effectiveness with infrared imaging on experimental fires. International Journal of Wildland Fire 34 I1: article WF24161. https://doi.org/10.1071/WF24161

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