Abstract
Wildfire indices are used globally to quantify and communicate a wide
range of fire characteristics, including fire danger and fire behaviour.
Wildfire terminologies, definitions and variables used to compute fire
indices vary broadly. This makes it difficult to compare them under a
common framework for regional assessment and for future improvements
under changing climate and land-use/land-cover conditions. This paper
reviews 24 fire indices used worldwide and proposes a simple framework
within which they can be classified based on constitutive inputs used
for their computation. We differentiate between constitutive inputs that
are raw or directly measurable variables such as fuel, weather and
topography (referred to as Level 1 inputs) and calculated constitutive
inputs such as fuel moisture (as a function of ecology and
hydrometeorology); fire behaviour (as a function of spread, energy, and
ignition); and dynamic meteorology. These six calculated constitutive
inputs are referred to as Level 2 inputs. Based on this classification,
our findings indicate that the Burning Index from the United States
National Fire Danger Rating System (NFDRS) and the Fire Weather Index
from the Canadian Forest Fire Danger Rating System (CFFDRS), used by
many countries worldwide, utilize the most comprehensive set of Level 2
inputs. In addition, the Level 2 input that is most frequently used by
all fire indices is fuel moisture as a function of hydrometeorology and
the least integrated input is that of fire ignition. We further group
the fire indices in three types: fire weather, fire behaviour, and fire
danger indices, according to the open literature definition of their
predictant outputs and examine the specific constitutive inputs used in
their computation. Most fire indices are based on Level 2 inputs (which
use Level 1 inputs) and are predominantly fire danger and fire behaviour
indices. This is followed by fire indices that use a combination of both
Level 1 and Level 2 inputs, separately and are mostly fire danger
indices. Only a few fire indices are computed solely with raw Level 1
inputs and are mainly fire behaviour indices. Providing a comprehensive
view of the existing wildfire indices’ utilization and computational
structure is expected to be a helpful resource for wildfire researchers
and operational experts worldwide. 2