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Detecting unburned areas within wildfire perimeters using Landsat and ancillary data across the northwestern United States

Dates

Publication Date

Citation

Arjan J.H. Meddens, Crystal A. Kolden, and James A. Lutz, 2016-12-01, Detecting unburned areas within wildfire perimeters using Landsat and ancillary data across the northwestern United States: Remote Sensing of Environment, v. 186, p. 275-285.

Summary

Abstract (from http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0034425716303261): Wildfires shape the distribution and structure of vegetation across the inland northwestern United States. However, fire activity is expected to increase given the current rate of climate change, with uncertain outcomes. A fire impact that has not been widely addressed is the development of unburned islands; areas within the fire perimeter that do not burn. These areas function as critical ecological refugia for biota during or following wildfires, but they have been largely ignored in methodological studies of remote sensing assessing fire severity under the assumption that they will be detected by algorithms for delineating fire perimeters. Our objective [...]

Contacts

Attached Files

Communities

  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
  • Northwest CASC

Associated Items

Tags

Categories
Other
Organization
Drought, Fire and Extreme Weather
Landscapes
Science Themes
NCCWSC Science Themes
Types

Provenance

Data source
Input directly

Additional Information

Citation Extension

citationTypeJournal Article
journalRemote Sensing of Environment
parts
typeVolume
value186
typePages
value275-285

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