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This technical glossary defines several words and expressions used in forest fire protection and management. The definitions are from the Glossary of Forest Fire Management Terms published in 2003 by the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre in Winnipeg.
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Campaign Fire – A fire of such size, complexity and/or priority that its extinction requires a large organization, high resource commitment, significant expenditure, and prolonged suppression activity. Synonym - Project Fire.
Canadian Forest Fire Behaviour Prediction (FBP) System – A subsystem of the Canadian Forest Fire Danger Rating System. The FBP System provides quantitative outputs of selected fire behaviour characteristics for certain major Canadian fuel types and topographic situations. For example, head fire rate of spread, which can be adjusted for the mechanical effects of slope, is expressed in metres per minute (m/min). The system depends partly on the Canadian Forest Fire Weather Index System components as inputs.
Canadian Forest Fire Danger Rating System (CFFDRS) – The national system of rating fire danger in Canada; referred to as the Canadian Forest Fire Behaviour or Behaviour Rating System before 1976. The CFFDRS includes all guides to the evaluation of fire danger and the prediction of fire behaviour such as the Canadian Forest Fire weather Index System and Canadian Forest Fire Behaviour Prediction System.
Canadian Forest Fire Weather Index (FWI) System – A subsystem of the Canadian Forest Fire Danger Rating System; referred to previously by a variety of names (e.g. Canadian Forest Fire Weather Index, Canadian Fire Weather Index, Canadian Forest Fire Weather Index Tables). The components of the FWI System provide numerical ratings of relative fire potential in a standard fuel type (i.e. a mature pine stand) on level terrain, based solely on consecutive observations of four fire weather elements measured daily at noon (1200 hours local standard time or 1300 hours daylight saving time) at a suitable fire weather station; the elements are dry-bulb temperature, relative humidity, wind speed, and precipitation. The system provides a uniform method of rating fire danger across Canada.
The FWI System consists of six components. The first three are fuel moisture codes that follow daily changes in the moisture contents of three classes of forest fuel; higher values represent lower moisture contents and hence greater flammability. The final three components are fire behaviour indexes representing rate of spread, amount of available fuel, and fire intensity; their values increase as fire weather severity worsens.
The six standard codes and indexes of the FWI System are:
Candle or Candling – See Torch or Torching under Fire Behaviour.
Centrifugal Pump – A pump that expels water by centrifugal force through the ports of a circular impeller rotating at high speed. This type of pump allows the discharge line to be shut off while the pump is running.
Chicot – See Snag.
Closed Area – An area in which specified activities or entry are temporarily restricted by agency legislation to reduce risk of man-caused fire. In some jurisdictions a closed area is called a restricted travel zone or a restricted fire zone.
Cold Trailing – Note Fire Suppression.
Combustion – A chemical oxidation-type process in which heat is produced (i.e. a substance is combined with oxygen). In the case of forest fires, living and dead fuels are converted to mainly carbon dioxide and water vapour, and heat energy is released very rapidly. Flaming combustion is characterized by the movement of a visible flame through the fuel bed. On the other hand, smouldering or glowing combustion is generally associated with the residual burning of forest fuels following flaming combustion.
Combustion actually consists of three more or less distinct but overlapping phases:
Control a Fire – To complete a control line around a fire, any spot fires therefrom, and any interior island(s) to be saved; burning out any unburned areas adjacent to the fire side of the control lines; burning off any unwanted island(s) inside the control lines; and cooling down all hot spots that are immediate threats to the control line until the lines can be expected to hold under foreseeable conditions. Stages of Control are:
Control Line – A comprehensive term for all constructed or natural fire barriers and treated fire perimeter used to control a fire. Note Fireguard and Fireline.
Convection Column – The definable plume of hot gases, smoke, firebrands, and other combustion by-products produced by and rising above a fire. Note Smoke Column under Smoke (2).
Cover Type – The designation of a vegetation complex according to its dominant species, age, and/or form.
Crown Scorch – Browning of the needles or leaves in the crown of a tree or shrub caused by the heat rising above a surface fire as a result of convection.