forest ecology and fire behavior - colorado state university

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Fire Behavior and Firefighter Safety & Tactics

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Page 1: Forest Ecology and Fire Behavior - Colorado State University

Fire Behavior and Firefighter Safety & Tactics

Page 2: Forest Ecology and Fire Behavior - Colorado State University

The Fire Triangle

In order for a fire to occur, the three

things must be present:

• Enough oxygen to sustain

combustion.

• Enough heat to raise the material to

its ignition temperature.

• Some sort of fuel or combustible

material.

• All three elements must be present

at the same time to have a fire. Fire

will burn until one or more of the

elements is removed.

Page 3: Forest Ecology and Fire Behavior - Colorado State University

Suppressing & Extinguishing a fire is accomplished by:

• Fuel - Separate the fuel to prevent combustion or remove during fireline construction

• Oxygen - Suffocate the fire with dirt or water to rob the fire of oxygen

• Heat - Cool the fire by applying water, dirt, retardant or a combination

Page 4: Forest Ecology and Fire Behavior - Colorado State University

Heat Transfer• Radiation

• Convection

• Conduction

Page 5: Forest Ecology and Fire Behavior - Colorado State University

Radiation

• Radiant heat can dry surrounding fuels and sometimes ignite the surrounding fuels

Page 6: Forest Ecology and Fire Behavior - Colorado State University

ConvectionThe hot gases and embers which compose the smoke column

can dry and ignite other fuels.

Page 7: Forest Ecology and Fire Behavior - Colorado State University

ConductionHeat is conducted from one fuel particle to another

through direct contact.

Page 8: Forest Ecology and Fire Behavior - Colorado State University

Convection

Radiation

Conduction

What type of heat transfer do the arrows indicate?

Page 9: Forest Ecology and Fire Behavior - Colorado State University
Page 10: Forest Ecology and Fire Behavior - Colorado State University

Fire Environment Triangle

• Weather

• Topography

• Fuels

The Three Components of the

Wildland Fire Environment:

Page 11: Forest Ecology and Fire Behavior - Colorado State University

Primary Factors that Affect Rate of Spread

•Wind speed

• Steepness of slope

•Changes in fuel type

Page 12: Forest Ecology and Fire Behavior - Colorado State University

Fire intensity is primarily affected by:

• Fuel loading

• Compactness or arrangement of fuels

• Fuel moisture content

• The rate of spread

Page 13: Forest Ecology and Fire Behavior - Colorado State University

Three methods of attack used by wildland firefighters

•Direct Attack - Constructing a fireline right on the fire perimeter. Keeping one foot in the black and one foot in the unburned area.

Page 14: Forest Ecology and Fire Behavior - Colorado State University

•Indirect Attack - Constructing a fireline some distance from the fire perimeter. Should use a barrier ( natural or constructed) in fireline construction if available. Intervening strip is wide and fuels are burned out. Allows a choice of timing for burning out

Page 15: Forest Ecology and Fire Behavior - Colorado State University

• Parallel Attack - Constructing a fireline

parallel to but further from the fire

perimeter than in direct attack, due to

fire intensity. May shorten line by

cutting across unburned fingers.

Intervening strips of narrow fuels are

immediately burned out.

Page 16: Forest Ecology and Fire Behavior - Colorado State University

Burning Out:

Setting fire inside the control line

to consume fuel

between the

line and the

fire. “Black-line

concept”

Page 17: Forest Ecology and Fire Behavior - Colorado State University

Safety• 10 Fire Orders

• Look Outs

• Communications

• Escape Routes

• Safety Zones

• 18 Watch out situations

Page 18: Forest Ecology and Fire Behavior - Colorado State University

“Look Up, Look Up, Look Down, Look Around”

• Weather

• Fire Behavior

• Operations• Poor visibility

• Powerlines

• Faulty equipment

• Unfamiliar equipment

• Fatigue

• Smoke on highway

• Stress