4.4 Article

The development and implementation of a human-caused wildland fire occurrence prediction system for the province of Ontario, Canada

Journal

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH
Volume 51, Issue 2, Pages 303-325

Publisher

CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1139/cjfr-2020-0313

Keywords

fire management; forest fire occurrence; person-caused; prediction interval; wildfire occurrence

Categories

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) [RGPIN-2015-04221, RGPIN-201504936]
  2. Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry (OMNRF)

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The study developed and implemented an operational human-caused wildland fire occurrence prediction system in Ontario, Canada, using supervised statistical learning models and stratified modelling approach. The system generates fine-scale daily maps and provides predictions for the expected number of fires in each region, achieving accurate prediction and monitoring of wildfires.
We describe the development and implementation of an operational human-caused wildland fire occurrence prediction (FOP) system in the province of Ontario, Canada. A suite of supervised statistical learning models was developed using more than 50 years of high-resolution data over a 73.8 million ha study area, partitioned into Ontario's Northwest and Northeast Fire Management Regions. A stratified modelling approach accounts for different seasonal baselines regionally and for a set of communities in the Far North. Response-dependent sampling and modelling techniques using logistic generalized additive models are used to develop a fine-scale, spatiotemporal FOP system with models that include nonlinear relationships with key predictors. These predictors include inter- and intra-annual temporal trends, spatial trends, ecological variables, fuel moisture measures, human land-use characteristics, and a novel measure of human activity. The system produces fine-scale, spatially explicit maps of daily probabilistic human-caused FOP based on locally observed conditions along with point and interval predictions for the expected number of fires in each region. A simulation-based approach for generating the prediction intervals is described. Daily predictions were made available to fire management practitioners through a custom dashboard and integrated into daily regional planning to support detection and fire suppression preparedness needs.

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