Is a Forest Fire a Natural Disaster? Investigating the Fire Tolerance of Various Tree Species—An Educational Module
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Wildfires—Advantages and Disadvantages
1.2. Occurrence, Severity and Origin of Wildfires
1.3. Wildfire Types
1.4. Aim of the Project
2. Fire Landscapes of the Earth
3. Pyrophytes—Fire-Adapted Specialists in the Plant Kingdom
4. Technical Applications
5. Educational Module “Fire Tolerance of Various Tree Species”
5.1. Independent Preparation by Students
5.2. Materials and Methods
5.2.1. Bark Samples
5.2.2. Flaming Tests
5.3. Results
6. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Fire Type | Description | Temperature | Combusted Material | Effect on Vegetation |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ground fires | flameless, smoldering, burn slowly (days to months) | “hot fire”, >500 °C | organic materials in the soil and on the surface | externally intact trees die because of burned root systems |
Surface fires | burn rapidly (seconds to minutes) | “cold fire”, up to 200 °C | surface and undergrowth | trees survive and regrow, bark is destroyed, vascular cambium remains functional |
Crown fires | only tree crowns burn | “hot fire”, >1000 °C | material at canopy level burns | trees die |
Full fires | burn slowly (days to months) | “hot fire”, up to 500 °C | combination of surface and crown fire | complete stand destruction |
Flying fires | burning plant structures fly over the fire front and cause new fires | dependent on the type of fire that is triggered | dependent on the causing fire | can ignite new fires |
Tree Species | Latin Name | Natural Distribution Area | Forest Fire Frequency |
---|---|---|---|
Giant sequoia | Sequoiadendron giganteum (Lindl.) J. Buchholz | California [39] | high |
Cork oak | Quercus suber L. | Mediterranean region [40] | high |
Scots pine | Pinus sylvestris L. | Europe, North Asia [41] | medium |
European larch | Larix decidua Mill. | Central Europe [42] | medium |
European beech | Fagus sylvatica L. | West and Central Europe [43] | low |
Silver fir | Abies alba Mill. | West, South, and Central Europe [44] | low |
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Speck, O.; Speck, T. Is a Forest Fire a Natural Disaster? Investigating the Fire Tolerance of Various Tree Species—An Educational Module. Biomimetics 2024, 9, 114. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomimetics9020114
Speck O, Speck T. Is a Forest Fire a Natural Disaster? Investigating the Fire Tolerance of Various Tree Species—An Educational Module. Biomimetics. 2024; 9(2):114. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomimetics9020114
Chicago/Turabian StyleSpeck, Olga, and Thomas Speck. 2024. "Is a Forest Fire a Natural Disaster? Investigating the Fire Tolerance of Various Tree Species—An Educational Module" Biomimetics 9, no. 2: 114. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomimetics9020114
APA StyleSpeck, O., & Speck, T. (2024). Is a Forest Fire a Natural Disaster? Investigating the Fire Tolerance of Various Tree Species—An Educational Module. Biomimetics, 9(2), 114. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomimetics9020114