4.2 Article

Satellite versus ground-based estimates of burned area: A comparison between MODIS based burned area and fire agency reports over North America in 2007

Journal

ANTHROPOCENE REVIEW
Volume 3, Issue 2, Pages 76-92

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/2053019615588790

Keywords

daily burned area; GFED; fire agency; ICS-209; North America; satellite observation

Funding

  1. NASA Atmospheric Chemistry Modeling and Analysis Program [NNX13AK46G]
  2. European Commission's Marie Curie Actions International Research Staff Exchange Scheme (IRSES)
  3. Natural Environment Research Council (NERC, UK)
  4. UK Met Office
  5. Natural Environment Research Council [1377877] Funding Source: researchfish
  6. NASA [471499, NNX13AK46G] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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North American wildfire management teams routinely assess burned area on site during firefighting campaigns; meanwhile, satellite observations provide systematic and global burned-area data. Here we compare satellite and ground-based daily burned area for wildfire events for selected large fires across North America in 2007 on daily time scales. In a sample of 26 fires across North America, we found the Global Fire Emissions Database Version 4 (GFED4) estimated about 80% of the burned area logged in ground-based Incident Status Summary (ICS-209) over 8-day analysis windows. Linear regression analysis found a slope between GFED and ICS-209 of 0.67 (with R = 0.96). The agreement between these data sets was found to degrade at short timescales (from R = 0.81 for 4-day to R = 0.55 for 2-day). Furthermore, during large burning days (> 3000 ha) GFED4 typically estimates half of the burned area logged in the ICS-209 estimates.

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