Iverson LR, Yaussy DA, Rebbeck J,
Hutchinson TF, Long RP, Prasad AM. 2004. A comparison of thermocouples and temperature paints to monitor
spatial and temporal characteristics of landscape-scale prescribed fires.
International Journal of Wildland Fire 13(3):1-12.
A method to better monitor
landscape-level fire characteristics is presented. Three study areas in
southern Ohio oak-hickory
(Quercus-Carya) forests were established with four treatment areas of roughly
20 ha each: control (C), burn only (B), thin only (T) or thin plus burn (TB). Two
independent measures useful for qualitatively characterizing fire intensity
were established on a 50-m grid, resulting in over 120 sampling locations at
each site, in the burned areas: aluminum tags painted with temperature-sensitive
paints, and logger-probe units that logged probe temperature every 2 s during
burns. Fires were conducted in spring 2001. The logger-probe units allowed five
measures qualitatively related to fire intensity or timing to be calculated at
each grid point: maximum probe temperature; duration of probe temperature above
30°C; a heat index, defined as the summed temperatures above 30°C; time of
maximum temperature; and estimated rate of spread. Maximum temperatures
recorded by the two measuring systems were highly correlated (r2 = 0.83).
Relative to painted tags, logger-probe units provide information useful for
assessing some other components of fire behaviour. The temporal recording of
temperatures allowed us to prepare a web-based simulation of the fires. Heat
index and rate of spread estimates provided additional fire information. The TB
units consistently burned cooler than the B units, perhaps because of uncured
slash and a disrupted fuel bed in those units.