2006
DOI: 10.1111/j.1466-822x.2006.00225.x
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Continental fire density patterns in South America

Abstract: Aims Quantification of the effects and interactions of natural and anthropogenic factors, including climate, canopy structure, land use and management conditions, on vegetation burning. The study of these relationships is fundamental to predict regional fire patterns and develop sound management and regulation policies for biomass burning at national and global levels.Location Southern South America, including Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay, Bolivia and Chile.Methods Based on National Oceanic and Atmosph… Show more

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Cited by 80 publications
(53 citation statements)
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“…1 and 4), resulting in low correlation at high spatiotemporal scales (Table 3). Because fires rarely occur on their own and generally form part of a regional pattern (Bella et al, 2006), the correlation increased considerably when accumulating results to a 1 • spatial scale. For the same reason model performance was found to be best in savannas and woody savannas, where the highest number of fires occur and the sample size is thus largest, or in areas of large fire size where omission was relatively low.…”
Section: Model Performance and The Modis Sampling Designmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…1 and 4), resulting in low correlation at high spatiotemporal scales (Table 3). Because fires rarely occur on their own and generally form part of a regional pattern (Bella et al, 2006), the correlation increased considerably when accumulating results to a 1 • spatial scale. For the same reason model performance was found to be best in savannas and woody savannas, where the highest number of fires occur and the sample size is thus largest, or in areas of large fire size where omission was relatively low.…”
Section: Model Performance and The Modis Sampling Designmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Savannas show the most fire activity of all major land cover types in South America (Dwyer et al 2000;Di Bella et al 2006;Chuvieco et al 2008). (See Online Resource 2 for further details on South American savannas.…”
Section: Background To Savanna Burning In South Americamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Vegetation fires studied worldwide [33][34][35][36] show that a majority of these fires are being set by man in areas with low water deficit [37]. As a result, occurrence of fire has a seasonal pattern, often influenced by land use activity, though its intensity and exact location will be different than the preceding year.…”
Section: Fire and Its Impact In Indian Tropical Forestsmentioning
confidence: 99%