Overview & Applicability
LANDFIRE (Landscape Fire and Resource Management Planning Tools) is a vegetation, fire and fuel characteristics mapping program. LANDFIRE data products consist of over 50 spatial data layers including: Existing Vegetation Type, Canopy, and Height; Biophysical Settings; Environmental Site Potential; Fire Behavior Fuel Models; Fire Regime Classes; and Fire Effects layers. These products are designed to be used at a landscape-scale to support resource management initiatives related to vegetation, fire management planning, stewardship of public and private lands, climate change and carbon sequestration and other topics. They can be used to evaluate management alternatives across boundaries.
[block:views=slideshows-block_4]
LANDFIRE was designed to use peer-reviewed, consistent, and repeatable scientific methods. Data products are developed through integrating products and procedures such as relational databases, georeferenced land-based plots and polygons representing field conditions, satellite-enabled remote sensing, systems ecology, gradient analysis, predictive landscape modeling, and vegetation and disturbance dynamics.
History
The LANDFIRE program evolved from increased concern about the number, severity, and size of wildland fires. LANDFIRE started with a prototype in 2002 and was officially chartered in 2004 by the Wildland Fire Leadership Council. Since 2004, an expanded range of land management uses of LANDFIRE data products has surfaced. These new uses include climate change research, carbon sequestration planning, eco-regional assessments, as well as ongoing fire management planning initiatives.
Read more about the project's background here.
Inputs and outputs
Inputs and outputs vary depending on the specific data product. User-collected data is not required for most products. Some general descriptions follow, although more detail can be found on the LANDFIRE Data Products pages.
Vegetation
Products range from maps of existing vegetation types, to maps of dominant vegetation pre Euro-American settlement (biophysical settings), to simple models that can be used to compare historic and current vegetation conditions. LANDFIRE uses vegetation products to create fuel and fire regimes data. Most vegetation products use NatureServe's Ecological Systems classification.
Fuel
Fuel data describe the composition and characteristics of surface and canopy fuel.
Fire
Historical fire regimes, intervals, and vegetation conditions are mapped using the Vegetation Dynamics Development Tool (VDDT).
Disturbance
Disturbance products reflect change on the landscape caused by management activities and natural disturbance, and are created by compiling data from many different sources (Landsat satellite imagery, user-contributed data, Rapid Assessment of Vegetation Condition after Wildfire, Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity, etc.). Products include maps which represent disturbance type, severity, and year.
Topography
Products include basic information on slope, aspect and elevation, compiled from a variety of sources.
While LANDFIRE has developed tools that help managers compare current to reference (aka "historic") conditions, the LANDFIRE team understands that managers also need to look into a future that includes new drivers such as exotic invasives, and climate change. In addition to providing input data for ecological models, both spatial and aspatial, LANDFIRE products can accommodate climate change information such as:
- Changing disturbance probabilities. For example, Louis Provencher and colleagues in Nevada have modified LANDFIRE reference condition models to represent current ecosystems, then added predicted future changes in fire regimes, potential restoration and other disturbances to explore what their ecosystems may look like, and how to adapt.
- LANDFIRE ecological modeling was done in Vegetation Dynamics Development Tool (VDDT). VDDT has been updated to a new platform called Path (http://essa.com/tools/path/) that allows for modeling inter-ecosystem shifts (i.e., acres converting to new ecosystems over time).
- LANDFIRE's Biophyical Settings Descriptions are being used on the Hiawatha National Forest as a framework for assessing potential climate change impacts. These descriptions are robust, have associated ecological models (to be manipulated in Path) and are mapped.
Are you using LANDFIRE for climate change planning? If so, please notify us at landfire@tnc.org.
Restrictions and limitations
LANDFIRE National products are delivered at a 30-meter pixel resolution. The most effective use of the products is at the landscape scale. Thus, applying LANDFIRE data at an individual pixel level or in small groups of pixels is not recommended. LANDFIRE products are not intended to replace local-scale data products. Appropriate landscape-scale analysis may include nationwide, regional (single large states, groups of smaller states), or sub-regional (large landscapes) strategic planning.
Since LANDFIRE represents a wide variety of products with many potential applications, users will need to ensure that the product they are using is appropriate for a particular application.
Accessing the tool and additional information
Information, fact sheets, FAQ's, tutorials and more can all be found through the LANDFIRE website.
Additional information for ArcMAP users
For those familiar with the LANDFIRE data distribution site, an advanced GIS data access tool (the LANDFIRE Data Access Tool) now allows users download LANDFIRE data directly from ArcMap.