✅HAZARDS 3.1.5.6 - Fires in Nature Flashcards

1
Q

What is a wildfire?

A

A bushfire or rural fire which is uncontrollable and spreading

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2
Q

What are the tree things needed for fires to burn?

A

Heat, Fuel and Oxygen

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3
Q

What can sources of fuel include?

A
Trees
Logs
Dry Grass
Petrol
Aerosols
Leaves
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4
Q

What can sources of heat include?

A
Cigarette ends
Matches
Barbecues
The sun
Electrical storms
Broken glass
Arson
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5
Q

How can the seasons affect the likelihood of wildfires?

A

The drier and windier the season, the more likely the wildfire

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6
Q

What is the most common cause of wildfire?

A

Arson

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7
Q

Which factors can worsen wildfires?

A
Dry vegetation
Ladder fuels
Hilly areas
Homes with wooden/timber cladding
Flammable fertilisers
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8
Q

How can wildfires be prevented?

A
Remove ladder fuels
Control of vegetation
Natural 'breaks' or borders
Removal of fuel sources
Burn off crops after harvest
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9
Q

What phenomenon can make conditions warmer and drier?

A

El Nino and the Indian Ocean Dipole

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10
Q

What is El Nino?

A

A climate cycle in the Pacific Ocean with a global impact on weather

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11
Q

How does vegetation type affect wildfires?

A

Water stroing plants eg Cacti are much harder to burn while Eucalyptus use the nutrients released from ash and the additional light from surrounding vegetation being burned, so promote wildfire

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12
Q

How can wildfires be mitigated against?

A

In countries such as Australia and the US, which are prone to fires, organisations produce advice for residents and some states such as Colorado provide residents with a set of guidelines

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13
Q

What are some of the guidelines set in Colorado?

A

Reduce fuels around the home
Mow grasses and weeds often, to shorter than 6 inches
Use fire resistant materials in the house
Dispose of any excess accumulation of logs

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14
Q

What is the most popular wildfire education campaign in the US?

A

Smokey Bear

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15
Q

What are the five rules in the Smokey Bear song?

A
Only you can prevent wildfires
Always be careful with fire
Never play with matches or lighters
Always watch your campfire
Make sure your campfire is out before leaving it
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16
Q

How effective has Smokey Bear been?

A

It was launched in 1944 and has since been popular with children and adults, teaching the effect of wildfire on the environment. The success has largely been down to the character.

17
Q

What do NEPA do in the US?

A

The National Fire Protection Agency runs fire community preparedness days annually to help reduce fuels and educate communities

18
Q

How can wildfires be detected?

A

Using traditional manned lookout towers, which can be unreliable and require 24 hour surveillance, or more recently, computer based video analysis which can automatically produce an alert

19
Q

What does the law state in California?

A

The residents must clear out all flammable materials such as bush or vegetation around 100ft of the property to create defensible space

20
Q

What does the law state in Scotland?

A

The any open fires must be kept under control and must not be lit in prolonged dry periods in areas such as grasslands or forests

21
Q

Crown fires

A

Burn up trees the entire length, most intense and dangerous
Up to 11,000°C

22
Q

Surface Fires

A

Burn only surface litter
Easiest to put out
9000°C

23
Q

Ground Fires

A

AKA underground or subsurface fires
occur in deep accumulations of humus, peat, etc.
Very slow, hard to put out
Can smoulder underground in winter and emerge in spring
5400°C

24
Q

How vegetation affects wildfires

A

Denser, drier, taller = more flammable
Some vegetation has flammable sap like eucalyptus and acacia

25
Q

How climate affects wildfires

A

Dry (under 7% humidity) and windy for more fires
Temporal Variation, like El Niño (wet S American, dry SE Asian) can make conditions more favourable

26
Q

How topography effects wildfires

A

Air from mountains gets compressed and warmed, so less humid, dries out vegetation.
Fires travel faster upwards than forwards, so hills = faster travel

27
Q

Australian Wildfires Dec 2019- Jan 2020

A

Positive Indian Ocean Dipole caused temps to rise to 41°C in Australia

28
Q

Positive effects of wildfires

A

Some plants are adapted against fires, pyrophytic plants, like Baobab Tree with resistant bark
Clearing vegetation makes way for new grass, breaks down vegetation into nutrients for soil

29
Q

How fires impact soil and land

A

Can damage soil structure and nutrient content
Like in Georgia, US, 2017, 55000m^2 damaged
LT, less evapotranspiration, less rain

30
Q

How wildfires impact health

A

Breathing problems
in SE Asia, 1997/8 fires caused 60 000 to need hospital treatment for this

31
Q

Impact of wildfires on emergency cost

A

Greece 2007, 9000 firefighters used to cover 200,000 hectares of devastated land