Broad-scale alterations of historical fire regimes and vegetation
dynamics have occurred in many landscapes in the U.S. through the
combined influence of land management practices, fire exclusion,
ungulate herbivory, insect and disease outbreaks, climate change, and
invasion of non-native plant species.
The LANDFIRE Project produces maps
of historical fire regimes and vegetation conditions using the
disturbance dynamics model VDDT. LANDFIRE also produces maps of current
vegetation and measurements of current vegetation departure from
simulated historical reference conditions. These maps support fire and
landscape management planning outlined in the goals of the National Fire
Plan, Federal Wildland Fire Management Policy, and the Healthy Forests
Restoration Act.
The Fire Regime Groups layer
characterizes the presumed historical fire regimes within landscapes
based on interactions between vegetation dynamics, fire spread, fire
effects, and spatial context (Hann and others 2004). Fire regime group
definitions have been altered from previous applications (Hann &
Bunnell 2001; Schmidt and others 2002; Wildland Fire Communicator's
Guide) to best approximate the definitions outlined in the Interagency
FRCC Guidebook. These definitions were refined to create discrete,
mutually exclusive criteria. This layer was created by linking the BpS
layer to the Fire Regime Group rulesets.
This geospatial product should
display a reasonable approximation of Fire Regime Group, as documented
in the Refresh Model Tracker. The Historical Fire Regime Groups data
layer categorizes simulated mean fire return intervals and fire
severities into five fire regimes defined in the Interagency Fire Regime
Condition Class Guidebook.
The classes are defined as follows: Fire
Regime I: 0 to 35 year frequency, low to mixed severity Fire Regime II: 0
to 35 year frequency, replacement severity Fire Regime III: 35 to 200
year frequency, low to mixed severity Fire Regime IV: 35 to 200 year
frequency, replacement severity Fire Regime V: 200+ year frequency, any
severity Additional data layer values were included to represent Water
(111), Snow / Ice (112), Barren (131), and Sparsely Vegetated (132).
Vegetated areas that never burned during the simulations were included
in the category "Indeterminate Fire Regime Characteristics" (133); these
vegetation types either had no defined fire behavior or had extremely
low probabilities of fire ignition..