A temporal framework of large wildfire suppression in practice, a qualitative descriptive study | Natural Hazards Research Australia

A temporal framework of large wildfire suppression in practice, a qualitative descriptive study

Journal article

Publication type

Journal Article

Published date

10/2019

Author Heather Simpson , Ross Bradstock , Owen Price
Keywords
Abstract

Suppression activities on large wildfires are complicated. Existing suppression literature does not take into account this complexity which leaves existing suppression models and measures of resource productivity incomplete. A qualitative descriptive analysis was performed on the suppression activities described in operational documents of 10 large wildfires in Victoria, Australia. A five-stage classification system summarises suppression in the everyday terms of wildfire management. Suppression can be heterogeneous across different sectors with different stages occurring across sectors on the same day. The stages and the underlying 20 suppression tasks identified provide a fundamental description of how suppression resources are being used on large wildfires. We estimate that at least 57% of resource use on our sample of 10 large wildfires falls outside of current suppression modelling and productivity research.

Year of Publication
2019
Journal
Forests
Volume
10
Number of Pages
884
Date Published
10/2019
URL
https://www.mdpi.com/1999-4907/10/10/884
DOI
10.3390/f10100884
Refereed Designation
Refereed
Locators Google Scholar | DOI

Related projects

Project
Productivity and effectiveness of suppression resources and tactics on large fires