Forest fires in India: regional and temporal analyses


Citation

Srivastava P., . and Garg A., . Forest fires in India: regional and temporal analyses. pp. 228-239. ISSN 0128-1283

Abstract

Forest fire threatens the wealth and biodiversity of the forest. Studies suggest that 90 of vegetation fires in India may be man-made and annually about 3.73 mil ha of forest area are affected leading to a loss of USD104 million. The present study using MODIS (Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer) data from Web Fire Mapper on active fire location for 2001“2011 tried to relate vegetation fire incidences with causal factors and vulnerability of the forest types in India. There were four regional cluster variation based on types. Tropical dry deciduous forest contributed the highest number of fires with maximum numbers in 2004 2009 and 2010. The main factor affecting the spread of forest fire was inflammable material i.e. type and characteristics of vegetation. The study also analysed the vegetation component using landuse/land cover maps derived from satellite data and also anthropogenic factors such as livelihoods coupled with fire-favourable weather. The study highlighted the need for an integrated approach to forest fire management.


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Abstract

Forest fire threatens the wealth and biodiversity of the forest. Studies suggest that 90 of vegetation fires in India may be man-made and annually about 3.73 mil ha of forest area are affected leading to a loss of USD104 million. The present study using MODIS (Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer) data from Web Fire Mapper on active fire location for 2001“2011 tried to relate vegetation fire incidences with causal factors and vulnerability of the forest types in India. There were four regional cluster variation based on types. Tropical dry deciduous forest contributed the highest number of fires with maximum numbers in 2004 2009 and 2010. The main factor affecting the spread of forest fire was inflammable material i.e. type and characteristics of vegetation. The study also analysed the vegetation component using landuse/land cover maps derived from satellite data and also anthropogenic factors such as livelihoods coupled with fire-favourable weather. The study highlighted the need for an integrated approach to forest fire management.

Additional Metadata

[error in script]
Item Type: Article
AGROVOC Term: Vegetation
AGROVOC Term: Firebreaks
AGROVOC Term: Vegetation types
AGROVOC Term: Risk factors
AGROVOC Term: Forest fires
AGROVOC Term: Susceptibility to heat
AGROVOC Term: Boreal and deciduous forests
AGROVOC Term: Forest fires
AGROVOC Term: Vegetation
AGROVOC Term: Coniferous forests
Geographical Term: India
Depositing User: Ms. Suzila Mohamad Kasim
Last Modified: 25 Apr 2025 09:54
URI: http://webagris.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/21233

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