Open Access
How to translate text using browser tools
15 August 2019 Characterization of Forest Fires to Support Monitoring and Management of Mount Kenya Forest
Claudio Poletti, Gergo Dioszegi, Kevin Wafula Nyongesa, Harald Vacik, Marco Barbujani, John Ngugi Kigomo
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Historical analysis of wildfire frequency, intensity, size, season, and type helps to determine the fire regime and the impacts of human activity in a region. Information about the temporal and spatial distribution of forest fires can help guide the formulation of integrated fire management policies. Mt Kenya Forest provides ecosystem services that sustain the livelihoods of local communities. However, forest fires have negatively affected sustainability of these services. This study describes recent fire patterns in the Mt Kenya forest. Field observations recorded by the Kenya Forest Service from 1980 to 2015 are analyzed. In addition, trends in fire occurrence over time and in relation to vegetation type are described. Key findings evidence a fire-prone period in February and March and a decrease of total burned area during the study period. Bush and grassland were the most fire-prone vegetation, and the fire regime varied in each forest station. Further, field observations were compared with satellite data. Some discrepancies between the field and satellite fire data were observed, especially for larger fires. These findings confirm the importance of monitoring efforts by the Kenya Forest Service to inform wildfire management. Recommendations are made on ways to improve fire monitoring and fire suppression efforts.

Introduction

Fire is a key factor shaping the landscape and influencing vegetation structure (Dempewolf 2007) and composition (Detsch et al 2016). Fire frequency, distribution, and severity are fundamental drivers of ecosystem dynamics (Tansey et al 2004), and although many ecosystems are well adapted to recurring fire events, human activities and climate change have modified traditional fire regimes. In Kenya, the human impact on fire regimes became more intense after the introduction of industrial plantations in 1930 (Colombaroli et al 2016). In contrast to other regions, where fire occurrence has recently decreased (Detsch et al 2016), in Kenya the annual fire frequency slightly increased in the last century, a consequence of a growing human population with increasing per capita food consumption that is driving agriculture expansion and affecting natural ecosystems (Grau et al 2008; Nyongesa 2015). The communities living around Mt Kenya depend on its forest for fuelwood, grazing, fishing, and nontimber forest products (Nyongesa and Vacik 2019). Pastoralists from neighboring counties also bring their livestock to Mt Kenya to pasture during the dry season, increasing the pressure on resources (KWS 2010).

Wildfire causes in Africa are mainly related to human activities (Wass 2000; Lambrechts et al 2002; Detsch et al 2016); natural ignition, such as by lightning or friction between dry leaves, is extremely rare (Poletti 2016). At Mt Kenya, fires in bushland and forest are common because community members use fire to burn charcoal, harvest honey, hunt in the forest, prepare farmland, break impenetrable bushland, and control weeds, pests, and parasites (Nyongesa and Vacik 2018). Among local people, lack of awareness of the need to evaluate and balance the relative risks posed by fires against the beneficial ecological and economic effects is common (Poletti 2016; Nyongesa and Vacik 2018).

In these mountainous and frequently inaccessible areas, many fires occur in the dry seasons (Dempewolf 2007). Firefighting efforts are often hampered by lack of information, equipment, and training (KFS 2010). Although strong efforts have been made to understand wildfire patterns in African savannah ecosystems (Meyer et al 2005; Govender et al 2006), few similar studies have been done for the mountains of East Africa (Buytaert et al 2011). Resources used to reconstruct a fire regime include field fire records, paleoecological evidence, and satellite images (Eastaugh and Vacik 2012; Colombaroli et al 2016; Dioszegi 2018). Solid information about forest fire characteristics could help guide the development of fire policies and management principles in Kenyan mountain forests.

The Mt Kenya forest is an indispensable natural resource, providing ecosystem services, income from tourism, and job opportunities for local communities and other Kenyans. Despite its importance and long fire history, studies of Mt Kenya forest fire ecology are scant (KFS 2010). This study of the fire regime of the Mt Kenya forest aimed to characterize fire location and period and the type(s) of vegetation most affected by fire. Its main goals were to (1) collate and analyze field-based fire records collected by the Kenya Forest Service (KFS) from 1980 to 2015, (2) detect any trend in fire occurrence by time, location, and in relation to vegetation type, (3) compare the field-based records with satellite-based data, and (4) develop recommendations for more effective forest fire management.

Material and methods

Study area

Mt Kenya (0.15083° S and 37.3075° E) is located in the central highlands of Kenya and spreads over 5 counties: Embu, Kirinyaga, Meru, Nyeri, and Tharaka Nithi. The mountain, covering an area of more than 200,000 ha, hosts almost 15% of Kenya's native forest (Emerton 1999; UNESCO 2013). The 5199 m high mountain provides drinking water and hydroelectric power to a great part of the country (Enjebo and Öborn 2012). The Mt Kenya forest plays an essential role for the Kenyan people, especially for those who live close to it. It is a source of income for more than 200,000 people who live within 1.5 km of its edge (Emerton 1999) and depend on it for firewood, charcoal, food, water, herbal medicine, and income from tourism. Mt Kenya's importance is globally recognized; it was designated as a United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Natural World Heritage Site in 1997 (Gichuhi et al 2014).

Mt Kenya has climatic patterns typical of boreal forests (Downing et al 2016). Its rare afro-alpine ecosystem (UNESCO 2013) occurs only in a few elevated areas on the continent (KWS 2010). The forest, at 2000–3500 m elevation, is mainly characterized by Olea capensis L, Juniperus procera H, and Podocarpus spp (Niemelä and Pellikka 2004; Gichuhi et al 2014) and has high biodiversity (Bussmann 1994). Due to its equatorial location, there is little or no difference between northern and southern aspects (Young and Peacock 1992), but orographic precipitation characterizes the region's humid eastern and southern areas (2500 mm precipitation per year), while the northern area is dry (less than 1000 mm per year) (Lange et al 1997; Gichuhi et al 2014). Heavy rains occur from the middle of March to the beginning of June (“long rains” period) and from the middle of October to December (“short rains” period) (Henne et al 2008). The East African climate has changed in the last decades, and more intense rain and drought periods are forecast for the future (Hulme et al 2001). Fire, climate, and vegetation are closely connected (Satendra and Kaushik 2014), and an alteration in rain patterns may influence the vegetation composition and fire regime.

The mountain is divided into 2 main administrative areas (Figure 1). The Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) is responsible for Mt Kenya National Park (69,406 ha), the innermost area. KFS manages the 20 forest stations that make up the Mt Kenya Forest Reserve (213,083 ha) (KFS 2010; Gichuhi et al 2014). Each forest station is a management unit area of Mount Kenya Forest. It has a well-defined administrative boundary and is managed by a forest manager employed by KFS. KFS and KWS work together to document and fight fires (Nyongesa and Vacik 2018). Mt Kenya community forest associations were formed in 2009 to involve communities in managing forest and wildlife resources and to help regulate human activities according to the agreed user rights (KFS 2017). Participatory forest management includes regular maintenance of fire breaks, forest protection by community scouts, regulated grazing to control grass growth, and community involvement in silviculture (Republic of Kenya 2005, 2016).

FIGURE 1

Location of the study area on Mt Kenya. Mount Kenya Forest Stations: light gray with white borders; National Park: darker grey; forest stations (study area): darker gray with black borders. (Map by Dioszegi Gergo)

f01_R1.jpg

The current forest distribution is defined by geographic, climatic, and anthropogenic characteristics (Satendra and Kaushik 2014) with many local microclimates due to the irregular topography (Buytaert et al 2011). Fire is the major hazard for Mt Kenya vegetation (IUCN 2013), altering its structure and composition (Poletti 2016). Some plant species are fire-intolerant; others, like Juniperus procera H and Hagenia abyssinica Bruce (Lange et al 1997; Njeri et al 2018), require fire to germinate, establish, or reproduce (Adie and Lawes 2009; Butz 2009).

The most fire-prone areas are those spanning the lower western forest to the northeast, where the fire risk is strongly increased by lack of rainfall during the dry seasons (KWS 2010). Our study area, 5 fire-prone forest stations (Marania, Ontulili, Nanyuki, Gathiuru, and Naro Moru; Figure 1) extending over 53,726 ha, was selected based on the availability of field fire records.

Fire records

KFS station managers document wildfire size, date, causes, and firefighting actions, estimating burned area directly in the field or, if the burned site is not easily accessible, through aerial imagery. Fires that start in the forest reserve can spread to the national park and vice versa, so some fire records kept by KFS cover fires that occur on the moorland in the national park (Nyongesa and Vacik 2018). The moorland was excluded from our study because it is not forested and grows at higher elevations (Lange et al 1997) outside the Mt Kenya forest boundaries. In March 2016, all KFS documents related to fire events that occurred from 1980 to 2015 were digitized and converted to an Excel spreadsheet (Poletti 2016).

The Kenyan Forestry Research Institute provided Esri shapefiles of forest station boundary maps and Mt Kenya vegetation composition. The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) provided the burned area fire product MCD45A1, which provides information about the confidence in detecting burned versus nonburned areas (Boschetti et al 2009; Giglio et al 2015; Sharma et al 2015). The MCD45A1 product combines data from 2 satellites (Aqua and Terra) and returns monthly estimates of burned areas; it has a spatial resolution of around 500 m. In this study, MODIS MCD45A1 product polygons were used to select burned areas within the studied forest stations, along with another MODIS product, MCD14DL Collection 5, which provides detected fire occurrences on a monthly basis. Ignition sites (Dioszegi 2018) were displayed to visualize the spatial extent of burned areas and ignition sites.

Field data were cleaned (unreliable records were removed) and analyzed to verify any anomalies in the recording system. The field dataset was split into 2 periods, 1980–1999 and 2000–2015. These intervals contain similar numbers of fire events, and the latter period coincides with the years for which satellite-based burned area product was available.

The hypothesis assumed that if there were no differences between the field data observation in the different periods (1980–1999 and 2000–2015), the field dataset could be considered consistent through the years. Conversely, the presence of differences between the periods might suggest some change in the data collection method. The comparison focused on the relation between burned area and fire frequency (Eastaugh and Vacik 2012). It was assumed that (1) small fires tend to appear more often than large fires and tend to be underreported, especially in older data sources, thus affecting dataset consistency; (2) fire size and frequency relationships can be described by power law distributions that show no significant changes over time (Malamud et al 2005); and (3) such power laws refer to the upper tail of the distributions. For power law fitting, a minimum burned area (Kmin) threshold was calculated, under which burned area records were excluded. The consistency between the 2 periods was verified by comparing their scaling parameters (gamma, from power law fitting) and distributions (via nonparametric tests).

The analyses were performed in the R computational environment (R Core Team 2018). For the fit of power law distributions, Kmin was determined as proposed by Clauset et al (2009), whose R function returned the gamma parameters of both periods; this operation also required the R VGAMdata package. Then, the presence of differences was assessed with nonparametric tests as burned area size is not normally distributed. Similarly to Eastaugh and Vacik (2012), we performed the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test (K-S) (Unsworth et al 1999; Sekhon 2011). K-S (R matching package) returned the significance of the maximum absolute distance (D) between 2 cumulative curves, in this case between the burned area distributions of the 2 periods. Since K-S describes a part of distributions only (the interval with the maximum D), we also used the Kruskal-Wallis test (K-W) (Ostertagová et al 2014; Dinno 2015). K-W (R stats package) gives a critical value below which 2 ranked distributions can be considered as taken from the same population. To get more insights, we also performed K-S and K-W tests on paired subsets of data from the 2 periods according to determined threshold sizes (≥20 ha, ≥5ha but <20 ha, and ≥0.5 ha but <5 ha; the <0.5 ha class was excluded due to its small sample size).

After dataset evaluation, the study focused on characterizing the fire regime and identifying any fire trends through the year and within different vegetation types. In this analysis, 2 new periods (1984–1999 and 2000–2015) were considered. Fire events before 1984 were excluded in order to provide 2 time periods of equal length (16 years), which was assumed to provide a better perception of similarities and differences in burned area size and fire occurrences.

To characterize the fire regime, we estimated the number of fire events, fire frequency, total burned area, fire rotation (amount of time the whole study area takes to be burned), mean burned area, and mean annual burned area (Downing et al 2017) for the whole period (1984–2015) and for the 2 subperiods (1984–1999 and 2000–2015). The monthly occurrence of fires during the 32 years and in the different vegetation types was also analyzed.

Following directions provided in the work of Dioszegi (2018), the field dataset was compared with the burned areas determined via satellite. First, a method called the absolute summed percentile (ASP) was created and applied for the comparative analysis. The ASP was calculated with the following formula:

e01_R1.gif

where x is satellite-based burned area size, h is its h-th iteration, y indicates field-based burned area sizes and i is their i-th iteration. Obtained values were binned into 6 increasing 3% classes, determined as ≥15%, ≥12% but <15%, ≥9% but <12%, ≥6% but <9%, ≥3% but < 6%, and <3%. The generated ASP classes represent weighting. The higher an ASP class is, the more weight the class takes in the absolute sum [abs(xh þ yi)] of burned areas (ie the size of the burned area was detected more often or the burned area size was considerably higher for the given class). This made it possible to reveal the underlying structure of large (ie above 500 ha) burned areas detected by the different systems.

A second, quantitative comparison was conducted for 2000–2015 and visualized with a mirrored bar chart indicating yearly burned areas and fire seasonality as recorded by satellite and in the field. The spatial distribution of satellite-detected seasonal burned areas and ignition sites was plotted on map.

Results

Evaluating field fire records

The selected forest stations reported 153 fire events from 1980 to 2015. Of these, 5 occurred on the moorland, and 1 had to be omitted because of its unconventional documentation format. This study analyzed the remaining 147 fires: 73 in 1980–1999 and 74 in 2000–2015. Exclusively for the comparison of time periods through power law fitting, data were reduced according to the Kmin value (20 ha) to 77 fires (38 in 1980–1999 and 39 in 2000–2015). The resulting gamma values are very similar for both periods (Table 1).

TABLE 1

Goodness of fit of power law relationships for each study period.

t01_R1.gif

Differences in the K-S D-statistic values turned out to be insignificant (P > 0.05), as can be seen in Table 2 and Figure 2. K-W observed values for the subsequent burned-area categories did not exceed their critical values. No significant differences between the fire area distributions of the 2 periods could be found from the K-S and K-W tests.

TABLE 2

Results of K-S and K-W conducted on burned area size as detected in the 2 study periods. Because of the small number of cases, we excluded areas <0.5 ha from the analysis.

t02_R1.gif

FIGURE 2

Results of K-S: a comparative analysis of empirical cumulative distribution function curves of burned areas for 1980–1999 and 2000–2015 for the subset burned area classes indicated above the concerned panel. The calculated minimum burnt area threshold, 20 ha, is shown in the top right panel.

f02_R1.jpg

Characterizing the fire regime

From 1984 to 2015, 130 fire events occurred in the analyzed forest stations, destroying 19,236 ha of forest (Table 3). The territory was affected on average by 4 fires per year and a fire rotation of 89 years was registered. Fewer fires (56) occurred from 1984 to 1999 than in the following period (74 in 2000–2015); on the other hand, the mean individual fire size and mean total burned area per year were higher in the first period (177 ha and 620 ha per year, respectively) than in the second period (126 ha and 582 ha per year, respectively).

TABLE 3

Fire statistics for Mt Kenya.

t03_R1.gif

Throughout the study period, fires occurred primarily in the first 3 months of each year (Figure 3), burning 16,386 ha (more than 85% of the total burned area) in February and March alone. After 2000, a few big fires occurred later in the year as well. Burned area was the greatest (5580 ha) in March from 1984 to 1999 and in February (5111 ha) from 2000. A notable area (967 ha) burned in January only in the first period, and in July and September (709 ha and 497 ha, respectively) only in the second. The 2 periods had similar trends in fire occurrence, showing a notable difference only in the most fire-prone month, February, with 23 fires detected in the first period and 33 in the second. Other fire-prone months were March (with 31 events across both study periods), January (with 11), and September (with 13). In the earliest years, March was also the month with the highest mean annual burned area (350 ha/year), but this seemed to move to February (320 ha/year) in the second period.

FIGURE 3

Characterization of Mt Kenya forest fires, 1984–2015. Dotted horizontal lines indicate April 1, considered the end of the main fire season; solid vertical lines separate 1984–1999 from 2000–2015. Burned areas by month, year, forest station, and vegetation type. Rectangle width indicates the occurrence of fire during the months, while shading indicates the size of burned areas.

f03_R1.jpg

Bush and grassland were the most fire-prone vegetation types (Figure 3), mentioned in more than 65% of the fire reports. These areas experienced fire regularly throughout the study period, with little or no difference between the 2 subperiods. Over the 32 years of the study period, Mt Kenya Forest lost 14,000 ha of bush and grassland (6600 ha in 1984–1999 and 7400 ha in 2000–2015). Burned area as a proportion of total burned area increased from 34% to 38%.

The areas covered by Gathiuru and Ontulili forest stations revealed similar fire behavior, with the majority of events detected from January to March. By contrast, Marania experienced fires mainly from July to September, especially from 1984 to 2000. The 3 forest stations were affected especially in indigenous forest and in bush and grasslands; on the other hand, Nanyuki was affected almost exclusively in the plantation (Figure 3).

Figure 3 summarizes the major fire trends in the study area. The most fire-prone season was February/March, and fires occurred predominantly in bush and grassland. The most affected forest stations were Gathiuru, Ontulili, and Marania.

In the first period, fires affected plantations (55% of fires) more frequently than indigenous forest (48% of fires); but in the second period, more than 60% of fires occurred in indigenous forest and fewer than 25% on plantations. On plantations, fire destroyed more than 400 ha (2% of total burned area) in the first period but less than 90 ha (0.5%) in the second period. A similar trend occurred in the indigenous forest, where the burned area decreased from 2884 ha (15%) in the first period to 1673 ha (8.7%) in the second period. Fires occurred in bamboo forest only in the second period, with a loss of 155 ha (Table 4).

TABLE 4

Burned area by vegetation type and study period.

t04_R1.gif

Comparison of field and satellite fire data

Comparison of the 2 datasets was possible only for the second study period because satellite data were not available for the earlier period. For 2000–2015, the field data showed a burned area of 9312 ha, while satellite data showed 8439 ha (Table 5). With a spatial resolution of about 500 m, the satellites can only detect burned areas bigger than 24 ha. For this reason, 304 ha of the burned area recorded in the field (the sum of all recorded burned areas smaller than 24 ha) were not detectable by the satellite sensor, reducing the difference between the 2 datasets to 569 ha. Greater differences between the 2 datasets existed in some forest stations. For example, for Marania, the forest station with the highest percentage of burned area, the field documents indicated that 30% of the area was burned, while satellite data indicated more than 70%. In terms of total burned area, the field data indicated that Gathiuru had the most at more than 3400 ha, while satellite data indicated that Marania had the most at 5500 ha (Table 5). Gathiuru had the most fire events according to the field data, and Marania had the most according to the satellite data.

TABLE 5

Forest stations' total size and amount of burned area from 2000 to 2015.

t05_R1.gif

More in-depth comparison revealed additional differences between the 2 datasets. The amount of burned area detected by at least 1 of the 2 systems was 14,356 ha, of which 3394 ha (24%) was registered by both systems in the same month within the same forest station; 5045 ha (35%) was recorded in a defined month and forest station only by the satellites; 5917 ha (41%) was recorded only by the field documents, of which only 304 ha (2% of the total) was not detectable by the satellites due to restricted detection capability (only areas >24 ha were detectable).

The slightly diverging R2 trend lines in Figure 4 indicate different large burned area detection for less and more weighted classes of ASP. This weighting follows a logical principle: more frequently occurring large burned areas and larger burned areas mean larger fires, more devastation, more firefighting effort, and accordingly higher costs. Large less-weighted burned areas (ASP classes <3% and 3%–6%) were detected similarly in both datasets. No ASP value fell into the 9%–12% class; more frequent large burned areas and extremely large burned areas (12%–15% and ≥15%) were detected by field observations than by satellites.

FIGURE 4

ASP comparative analysis results performed on satellite data and field data. No ASP value fell into the 9%–12% range. Lines are shown to help in visualizing the underlying behavior of ASP classes with respect to detection of large burned areas.

f04_R1.jpg

The majority of burned areas registered by the satellites from April to December were detected in Marania, while in Gathiuru and Ontulili fires occurred mainly from January to March. Ignition sites revealed that the difference of fire occurrence between the high dry season and the rest of the year is common in all the considered forest stations (Figure 5).

FIGURE 5

Comparative burned area documentation. Map represents burned areas and ignition sites (as classified by Dioszegi 2018) for satellite data only. The bar chart on the right compares burned areas between satellite and field data for 2000–2015. Black dots and white triangles evidence the seasonality of fire occurrence in both map and bar chart. The year 2010 is omitted because no records were available in any datasets. (Maps by Dioszegi Gergo, based on MODIS MCD14DL Collection 5 data [Dioszegi 2018])

f05_R1.jpg

Satellite data revealed a slight increase in fire frequency and burned area size after 2008, while field data showed only fluctuation of burned area size from 2000 to 2015. Both datasets recorded a high number of fires and large burned areas in 2002, 2005, 2011, and 2012. In 2008, fires that burned a large area were detected only by satellite, while in 2004, burned areas were detected only in field data. Both data sources were able to detect distinct seasonality, with greater fire activity from January to March than from April to December (Figure 5).

Discussion

The K-S and K-W did not show any significant anomaly during the study period for any size class, suggesting a certain consistency of the dataset. Discrepancies were detected only considering small fires. The gaps in the lower tail of the distribution might be the result of underreporting of small fires in older records, as the curve representing the earlier period tended to be the lowest (Figure 2C, D), but no clear evidence of the differences has emerged. The field records had similar data in the 2 study periods, suggesting stability in the fire detection and fire recording system from 1980 to 2015.

The mean fire size detected in our research (147.97 ha) is more than those detected in Kenya as a whole (around 100 ha) (Nyongesa 2015). Forest fires occur mainly from January to March and from July to September, during the dry seasons (Karanja 2016), but we observed differences in seasonal patterns in the 2 study periods, with the period of peak fire activity moving from March (1984–1999) to February (2000–2015). High fire occurrence from July to September was recorded in the study area only since 2000; in the same time period, fire activity dropped in January. Our research found a clear fire season only in February–March in Mt Kenya Forest, but large fires were recorded during the second dry season (July–September) as well. Other researchers (Downing et al 2017) have found a shift from 2 fire seasons to a single season in Mt Kenya National Park as well, but this area is almost totally covered by moorland, a highly flammable vegetation present only at the high altitude of Mt Kenya. On the other hand, by local residents of Gathiuru forest station still perceive the second dry season (July–September) as a “relevant fire season,” and Dioszegi (2018) described it as a “fire-sensitive” period.

The correlation between climate change, wildfires, and vegetation composition is commonly accepted (Wooller et al 2002; Levin et al 2016). This correlation could carry the changing meteorologic patterns to the fire regime and, consequently, to the vegetation structure and composition (Poletti 2016; Downing et al 2017). Fire can alter forest in different ways depending on frequency and intensity. It reduces the amount of trees and their dimensions; moreover, it can favor the growth of species not, or less, preset in the natural forest not affected by fire (Poletti 2016). At the same time, fire composition can influence fire behavior (Kane et al 2014). Fire ignition and spread are strictly related to vegetation flammability (Nelson et al 2012). In Mt Kenya, fires occur more frequently in grasslands (Dioszegi 2018), in which, due to their high flammability, fires ignite easily and are difficult to extinguish (Downing et al 2017). Grasses and shrubs usually grow very rapidly during the rainy season and dry up during the dry season, increasing fine fuel accumulation and continuity (Archibald et al 2010). Moreover, before the rainy season begins, pastoralists set fires in the grassland to keep it open and to facilitate the growth of new grass for feeding livestock, thereby increasing fire ignition in this vegetation type (Nyongesa and Vacik 2018).

Field fire records showed the largest burned area in Marania forest station, while the highest fire occurrence was detected in Gathiuru. Except for Gathiuru and Ontulili, each forest station evidenced different periods of fire occurrence and vegetation affected (Figures 3 and 5). This might be related to land-use practices in each single forest station, highlighting the variability of fire behavior in a relatively small area like our study area.

A similar number of fires occurred in indigenous forests as in bush and grassland, but the burned area was smaller throughout the study period and decreased in 2000–2015. This might be related to indigenous forests' higher value for local people but also to the increased participation by community forest associations in forest fire management. Plantations are more prone to fire spread than indigenous forest due to their structure and the high flammability of most plantation species (Karanja 2016). However, in Mt Kenya Forest, plantations are often more easily reached by firefighters and therefore more effectively protected. Their higher economic value could be a motivation to provide additional protection.

The lack of fire ignition site coordinates in field data does not permit a deeper comparison between the 2 datasets, which showed some discrepancies. The field and satellite fire records provide a good description of the fire regime in the region, evidencing fire-prone areas, vegetation, and periods. The field data are considered to be the most detailed fire documentation for Mt Kenya Forest as they contain a range of information in addition to what we analyzed in our study. Moreover, they do not have spatial detection limitations for small fires. The comparison of the 2 study periods of field data suggests that they are consistent over time. On the other hand, the lack of a proper storage system and human failures can influence the reliability of the dataset (Poletti 2016).

Satellite data are not always available (Dempewolf 2007; Detsch et al 2016). The satellite sensor may fail to detect some ignition sites and burned areas when they occur under clouds (Archibald et al 2010; Karanja 2016) or, in the case of small fires, under a closed canopy (Roy et al 2008; Tsela et al 2010). Satellites cannot detect fires smaller than 24 ha at all. MODIS was designed to produce low commission errors (Roy and Boschetti 2009; Bastarrika et al 2011), and its product, MCD45A1, contains information about the reliability of its data (Boschetti et al 2009). Its accuracy in afro-alpine ecosystems has not been thoroughly assessed. However, tests in other regions and ecosystems have indicated that it tends to underestimate burned area size (Roy et al 2005; Csiszar et al 2006; Anaya and Chuvieco 2012; De Klerk et al 2012; Levin and Heimowitz 2012; Núñez-Casillas et al 2013; Ruiz et al 2014; De Araújo and Ferreira 2015; Libonati et al 2015; Fornacca et al 2017). Our study found sufficient discrepancy between burned areas and ignition sites to create uncertainty about its accuracy. The satellite system detected fire occurrences and burned areas in 2 different periods, developing 2 different datasets from these observations, 1 for fire occurrence and 1 for burned areas. The changes in cloud and/or canopy cover can alter satellite sensor efficiency. For this reason, some fires may have been detected but not registered in burned areas and vice versa

Only about 24% of the burned areas were recorded in both satellite and field datasets. According to the ASP results, satellite and field fire records were similar for infrequently occurring large fires (ASP <3% and 3%–6%). The slightly diverging R2 lines indicate differentiation, with frequently occurring large fires and extremely large fires more often documented by the field system. This can be explained partly by satellite underestimation of burned area and partly by the consistency of the field recording system.

Conclusion and recommendations

Fire conditions in the Mt Kenya Forest are continually changing, and it is difficult to forecast future conditions (Downing et al 2017). The field fire recording system did not change from 1980 to 2015, ensuring the consistency of the only wildfire data available before 2000. Thanks to this documentation, it can be stated that the Mt Kenya fire regime is similar to that of the country as a whole (Nyongesa 2015), with a higher number of forest fires and a lower total burned area in the last period.

Fire occurrence and spreads are related to the prevailing weather conditions, type of vegetation, intensity of local residents' activities that cause fires in the Mt Kenya Forest (Poletti 2016; Nyongesa and Vacik 2018; Nyongesa and Vacik 2019). Rain is the main natural factor that controls fires on Mt Kenya. Seasonal precipitation separates the year in 2 different fire seasons, which often coincide with dry seasons even if the most fire-prone months changed in the last years. Additionally, orographic precipitation, more frequent on the southeastern side of the mountain, limit the fire-prone areas to the western and northeastern side (KWS 2010), especially in the short dry season (Poletti 2016). Vegetation is another determinant factor of fire occurrence; total burned area and number of fires differ in each vegetation class. The study provides evidence of when fires occurred more frequently, where the largest burned areas were, which vegetation type was most affected, and how these patterns changed during the study period. Such fire regime data are essential to update and improve fire management (Satendra and Kaushik 2014), create forest fire maps, coordinate forest management activities, and raise public awareness of forest fire issues.

Fire prevention is more efficient than fighting fire. The adoption of an effective fire-prevention system depends strongly on stakeholders who directly benefit from forest services (Smith et al 2016). Fire awareness and management did not have high priority in the last century, but the recent involvement of community forest associations in forest management has contributed to monitoring of fires and reducing their damage (Nyongesa and Vacik 2018). Total burned area decreased in 2000–2015, evidence of improved forest management, monitoring, and firefighting efficiency.

The variability of fire behavior in each vegetation class and forest station suggests the need for forest fire management that is as specific as possible for each area. Different topographic and climatic conditions require different forest fire management tactics (Smith et al 2016). In a fragmented region like the Mt Kenya Forest, with many inaccessible areas, it is crucial to improve communication between local communities using radio, Internet, and text messaging to spread information about forest fire issues. The need for equipment, trained personnel, and road maintenance is also commonly accepted (Karanja 2016; Nyongesa and Vacik 2018). Stronger cooperation and coordination between stakeholders are essential to achieving fire management goals (Menya and K'Akumu 2016). Agreements between different interest groups at the local and national levels can be the starting point for problem solving (Satendra and Kaushik 2014). Coordination between KFS and KWS can definitely improve the efficiency of planning and implementing fire management, but only if local residents are involved as well (Dioszegi 2018; Nyongesa and Vacik 2019). The reduction of fire occurrence and burned area size recorded in the plantation suggests, on the one hand, that in the last years, the size of burned areas was also related to the (economic) value attributed by local residents to the vegetation and, on other hand, that local involvement in warning and monitoring systems can greatly improve their effects (Smith et al 2016).

The comparison between field and satellite fire records revealed a gap between the 2 systems. Field data are mainly used to improve information about small fires not easily detectable by satellites, but we found that they are useful for large fires as well (Figure 4). Field and spatial data can correct each other (Levin et al 2016). Remote sensing is important to forest fire research, management, and monitoring, but it needs strong ground validation (Sonti 2015). The combination of advanced satellite detection systems and well-equipped human personnel, with fire towers and reliable communication and road systems, would improve fire detection systems (Dioszegi 2018). This, combined with improvements to the field recording system, would make satellite and field data much more comparable and useful and allow better understanding and prediction of fire spatial patterns (Levin et al 2016). More compatibility between these systems would also enable better comparative analysis of fire and climate trends.

The following improvements to Mt Kenya forest fire management are recommended:

  • Disseminate reliable information about fire conditions with a well-organized communication system to increase local public awareness of fire prevention and firefighting strategies.

  • Train community forest association members and other members of forest-adjacent communities in forest fire management, monitoring, and suppression.

  • Encourage participation by local communities in the development of fire management plans to sensitize them about the impacts of fires in different vegetation types.

  • Improve field records by adding fire ignition-site coordinates and creating a clear fire map.

  • Combine the use of field fire documentation and satellite technology to further enhance the fire detection system.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We acknowledge the Commission for Development Research for providing us with financial support for conducting the research as part of the FIREMAPS project (KEF P211). We thank Egerton University and University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna, for providing staff support and infrastructure during the research. We are grateful to the Kenya Forest Service, Kenya Wildlife Service, and Kenya Forest Research Institute for their interest in the research activities and for giving us permission to conduct research at Mt Kenya and supporting us with help and staff during data collection. We especially acknowledge the work of Ketty Itonga and Grace Warira in the data collection process. We also acknowledge members of the community forest associations from Gathiuru, Marania, Nanyuki, Naro Moru, and Ontulili for their participation in interviews and focus group discussions.

REFERENCES

1.

Adie H, Lawes MJ. 2009. Explaining conifer dominance in Afrotemperate forests: Shade tolerance favours Podocarpus latifolius over angiosperm species. Forest Ecology and Management 259:176–186.  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2009.10.006Google Scholar

2.

Anaya JA, Chuvieco E. 2012. Accuracy assessment of burned area products in the Orinoco basin. Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing 78(1):53–60.  http://dx.doi.org/10.14358/PERS.78.1.53Google Scholar

3.

Archibald S, Scholes RJ, Roy DP, Roberts G, Boschetti L. 2010. Southern African fire regimes as revealed by remote sensing. International Journal of Wildland Fire 19:861–878.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/WF10008Google Scholar

4.

Bastarrika A, Chuvieco E, Martin MP. 2011. Automatic burned land mapping from MODIS time series images: Assessment in Mediterranean ecosystems. IEEE [Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers] Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing 49(9):3401–3413.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TGRS.2011.2128327Google Scholar

5.

Boschetti L, Roy D, Hoffmann AA. 2009. MODIS Collection 5 Burned Area Product - MCD45. User's Guide Version 2.0 November 2009. GIS-Lab .  http://gis-lab.info/docs/mod_burned_area_user_guide_2.0.pdf; accessed on 11 December 2019. Google Scholar

6.

Bussmann RW. 1994. The Forests of Mt. Kenya (Kenya): Vegetation, Ecology, Destruction and Management of a Tropical Mountain Forest Ecosystem [PhD dissertation]. Bayreuth, Germany: University of Bayreuth. Google Scholar

7.

Butz RJ. 2009. Traditional fire management: Historical fire regimes and land use change in pastoral East Africa. International Journal of Wildland Fire 18:442–450.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/WF07067Google Scholar

8.

Buytaert W, Cuesta-Camacho F, Tobón C. 2011. Potential impacts of climate change on the environmental services of humid tropical alpine regions. Global Ecology and Biogeography 20(1):19–33.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.14668238.2010.00585.xGoogle Scholar

9.

Clauset A, Shalizi CR, Newman MEJ. 2009. Power-law distributions in empirical data. SIAM Review 51(4):661–703.  https://dx.doi.org/10.1137/070710111 . (R function available at http://tuvalu.santafe.edu/∼aaronc/powerlaws/; accessed on 15 October 2019) Google Scholar

10.

Colombaroli D, van der Plas G, Rucina S, Verschuren D. 2016. Determinants of savanna-fire dynamics in the eastern Lake Victoria catchment (western Kenya) during the last 1200 years. Quaternary International 448:67–80.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2016.06.028Google Scholar

11.

Csiszar IA, Morisette JT, Giglio L. 2006. Validation of active fire detection from moderate-resolution satellite sensors: The MODIS example in Northern Eurasia. IEEE [Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers] Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing 44(7):1757–1764.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TGRS.2006.875941Google Scholar

12.

De Araújo FM, Ferreira LG. 2015. Satellite-based automated burnt area detection: a performance assessment of the MODIS MCD45A1 in the Brazilian savanna. International Journal of Applied Earth Observation and Geoinformation 36:94–102.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jag.2014.10.009Google Scholar

13.

De Klerk HM, Wilson AM, Steenkamp K. 2012. Evaluation of satellite-derived burned area products for the fynbos, a Mediterranean shrubland. International Journal of Wildland Fire 21(1):36–47.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/WF11002Google Scholar

14.

Dempewolf J, Trigg S, DeFries RS, Eby S. 2007. Burned-area mapping of the Serengeti–Mara region using MODIS reflectance data. IEEE [Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers] Geoscience and Remote Sensing Letters 4(2):312–316.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/LGRS.2007.894140Google Scholar

15.

Detsch F, Otte I, Appelhans T, Hemp A, Nauss T. 2016. Seasonal and long-term vegetation dynamics from 1-km GIMMS-based NDVI time series at Mt. Kilimanjaro, Tanzania. Remote Sensing of Environment 178:70–83.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.rse.2016.03.007Google Scholar

16.

Dinno A. 2015. Nonparametric pairwise multiple comparisons in independent groups using Dunn's test. The Stata Journal 15:292–300. Google Scholar

17.

Dioszegi G. 2018. Spatio-temporal Modelling of Human-caused Fire in the Mt. Kenya region [Master thesis]. Vienna, Austria: University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences-BOKU, Department of Forest and Soil Sciences, Institute of Silviculture. Google Scholar

18.

Downing TA, Imo M, Kimanzi J. 2017. Fire occurrence on Mt. Kenya and patterns of burning. GeoResJ 13:17–26.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.grj.2016.12.003Google Scholar

19.

Downing TA, Imo M, Kimanzi J, Nekesa OA. 2016. Effects of wildland fire on the tropical alpine moorlands of Mt. Kenya. Catena 149:300–308.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.catena.2016.10.003Google Scholar

20.

Eastaugh C, Vacik H. 2012. Fire size/frequency modeling as a means of assessing wildfire database reliability. Austrian Journal of Forest Science 129(3/4): 228–247. Google Scholar

21.

Emerton L. 1999. Mt. Kenya: The Economics of Community Conservation. Evaluating Eden Series Discussion Paper 4. London, United Kingdom: International Institute for Environment and Development. Google Scholar

22.

Enjebo I, Öborn L. 2012. A Farming System Analysis on the Slope of Mt. Kenya. A study of how water resources and land use are affected by climate variability in two areas in Embu District, Kenya [Master thesis]. Uppsala, Sweden: Uppsala University. Google Scholar

23.

Fornacca D, Ren G, Xiao W. 2017. Performance of three MODIS fire products (MCD45A1, MCD64A1, MCD14ML), and ESA Fire_CCI in a mountainous area of Northwest Yunnan, China, characterized by frequent small fires. Remote Sensing 9(11):1131.  http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/rs9111131Google Scholar

24.

Gichuhi MW, Keriko JM, Mukundi JBN. 2014. Ecosystem services to the community: A situation analysis of Mt. Kenya conservation area using GIS and remote sensing. International Conference on Sustainable Research and Innovation. Proceedings of Sustainable Research and Innovation Conference 5:18–22.  http://sri.jkuat.ac.ke/ojs/index.php/proceedings/article/view/19; accessed on 19 October 2019. Google Scholar

25.

Giglio L, Justice C, Boschetti L, Roy D. 2015. MCD64A1 MODIS/TerraþAqua Burnt Area Monthly L3 Global 500m SIN Grid V006 [Dataset]. NASA EOSDIS Land Processes DAAC.  http://dx.doi.org/10.5067/MODIS/MCD64A1.006; accessed on 28 May 2018. Google Scholar

26.

Govender N, Trollope WSW, van Wilgen BW. 2006. The effect of fire season, fire frequency, rainfall and management on fire intensity in savanna vegetation in South Africa. Journal of Applied Ecology 43:748–758.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2664.2006.01184.xGoogle Scholar

27.

Grau HR, Gasparri NI, Aide TM. 2008. Balancing food production and nature conservation in the neotropical dry forests of northern Argentina. Global Change Biology 14:985–997.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2486.2008.01554.xGoogle Scholar

28.

Henne S, Junkermann W, Kariuki JM, Aseyo J, Klausen J. 2008. Mt. Kenya Global Atmosphere Watch Station (MKN): Installation and meteorological characterization. Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology 47(11):2946–2962.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1175/2008JAMC1834.1Google Scholar

29.

Hulme M, Doherty R, Ngara T, New M, Lister D. 2001. African climate change: 1900-2100. Climate Research 17(2):145–168.  http://dx.doi.org/10.3354/cr017145Google Scholar

30.

IUCN [International Union for Conservation of Nature]. 2013. Evaluations of Nominations of Natural and Mixed Properties to the World Heritage List . Report for the World Heritage Committee, 37th Session WHC-13/37.COM/INF.8B2. Phnom Penh, Cambodia, 16–27 June 2013, pp 4–12.  http://whc.unesco.org/archive/2013/whc13-37com-8B2inf-en.pdf; accessed on 15 October 2019. Google Scholar

31.

Kane VR, Lutz JA, Cansler AC, Povak NA, Churchill DJ, Smith DF, Kane JT, North MP. 2014. Water balance and topography predict fire and forest structure patterns. Forest Ecology and Management 338:1–13.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2014.10.038Google Scholar

32.

Karanja SK. 2016. Density-Based Cluster Analysis of Fire Hot Spots in Kenya's Wildlife Protected Areas [Report for the partial fulfillment of the degree of MSc Computational Intelligence]. Nairobi, Kenya: University of Nairobi, School of computing and informatics.  www.secheresse.info/spip.php?article58692; accessed on 30 October 2018. Google Scholar

33.

KFS [Kenya Forest Service]. 2010. Mt. Kenya Forest Reserve Management Plan 2010-2019. Nairobi, Kenya: Ministry of Environment Water and Natural Resources, Republic of Kenya. Google Scholar

34.

KFS [Kenya Forest Service]. 2017. Participatory Forest Management Plan for Gathiuru Forest.  http://xa.yimg.com/kq/groups/23491130/1315364834/name/Gathiuru; accessed on 14 April 2019. Google Scholar

35.

KWS [Kenya Wildlife Service]. 2010. Mt Kenya Ecosystem Management Plan, 2010-2020. Nairobi, Kenya: Ministry of Environment Water and Natural Resources, Republic of Kenya.  www.kws.go.ke/content/management-plans; accessed on 30 October 2018. Google Scholar

36.

Lambrechts C, Woodley B, Hemp A, Hemp C, Nnyti P. 2002. Aerial Survey of the Threats to Mt. Kilimanjaro Forests. Dar es Salaam, Tanzania: United Nations Development Programme. Google Scholar

37.

Lange S, Bussmann RW, Beck E. 1997. Stand structure and regeneration of the subalpine Hagenia abyssinica forests of Mt. Kenya. Botanica Acta 110(6):473–480.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1438-8677.1997.tb00665.xGoogle Scholar

38.

Levin N, Heimowitz A. 2012. Mapping spatial and temporal patterns of Mediterranean wildfires from MODIS. Remote Sensing of Environment 126:12–26.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.rse.2012.08.003Google Scholar

39.

Levin N, Tessler N, Smith A, McAlpine C. 2016. The human and physical determinants of wildfires and burnt areas in Israel. Environmental Management 58:549–562.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00267-016-0715-1Google Scholar

40.

Libonati R, DaCamara C, Setzer AW, Morelli F, Melchiori AE, de Almeida Cândido P, de Jesús SC. 2015. Validating MODIS Burnt Area Products Over Cerrado Region. Conference XVII SBSR [Simpósio Brasileiro de Sensoriamento Remoto], Brazilian Fire-Land-Atmosphere System (BrFLAS), João Pessoa, Brasil, 25–29 April 2015. Available at:  https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/011e/b4d2985626961c23ef8003084bd21b449c52.pdf; accessed on 10 October 2019. Google Scholar

41.

Malamud BD, Millington JDA, Perry GLW. 2005. Characterizing wildfire regimes in the USA. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 102(13):4694–4699. Google Scholar

42.

Menya AA, K'Akumu OA. 2016. Inter-agency collaboration for fire disaster management in Nairobi City. Journal of Urban Management 5:32–38.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jum.2016.08.001Google Scholar

43.

Meyer KM, Ward D, Moustakas A, Wiegand K. 2005. Big is not better: Small Acacia mellifera shrubs are more vital after fire. African Journal of Ecology 43:131–136.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2028.2005.00559.xGoogle Scholar

44.

Nelson DM, Verschuren D, Urban MA, Hu FS. 2012. Long-term variability and rainfall control of savanna fire regimes in equatorial East Africa. Global Change Biology 18:3160–3170.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2486.2012.02766.xGoogle Scholar

45.

Niemelä T, Pellikka P. 2004. Zonation and characteristics of the vegetation of Mt. Kenya. In : Pellikka P, Ylhäisi J, Clark B. editors. Taita Hills and Kenya, 2004-Seminar, Reports and Journal of a Field Excursion to Kenya. Vol 40. Helsinki, Finland: University of Helsinki, pp 14–20. Google Scholar

46.

Njeri WF, Githaiga JM, Mwala AK. 2018. The effects of fires on plants and wildlife species diversity and soil physical and chemical properties at Aberdare Ranges, Kenya. Asian Journal of Forestry 2(1):25–38.  http://dx.doi.org/10.13057/asianjfor/r020104Google Scholar

47.

Núñez-Casillas L, García-Lázaro JR, Ruiz JAM, Arbelo M. 2013. A comparative analysis of burned area datasets in Canadian boreal forest in 2000. Scientific World Journal 2013: ID289056.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/289056Google Scholar

48.

Nyongesa KW. 2015. Fire Management in Forests and National Parks of Kenya. Case Studies at Kakamega, Mt. Elgon and Mt. Kenya Forest and National Park [Master thesis]. Vienna, Austria: University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences-BOKU, Department of Forest and Soil Sciences, Institute of Silviculture. Google Scholar

49.

Nyongesa KW, Vacik H. 2018. Fire management in Mt. Kenya: A case study of Gathiuru forest station. Forests 9(8):481.  http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/f9080481Google Scholar

50.

Nyongesa KW, Vacik H. 2019: Evaluating management strategies for Mt. Kenya forest reserve and national park to reduce fire danger and address interests of various stakeholders. Forests 9:1–27.  http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/f10050426Google Scholar

51.

Ostertagová E, Ostertag O, Kováč J. 2014. Methodology and application of the Kruskal-Wallis test. Applied Mechanics and Materials 611:115–120. Google Scholar

52.

Poletti C. 2016. Characterization of Forest Fires in the Mt. Kenya Region (1980-2015) [Master thesis]. Padua, Italy: University of Padua, Department of Land, Environment Agriculture and Forestry. Google Scholar

53.

R Core Team. 2018. R: A Language and Environment for Statistical Computing. R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria.  www.R-project.orgGoogle Scholar

54.

Republic of Kenya. 2005. Kenya Forests Act, 2005.  www.fankenya.org/downloads/ForestsAct2005.pdf; accessed on 2 May 2005. Google Scholar

55.

Republic of Kenya. 2016. Forest Conservation and Management Act, 2016.  www.kenyalaw.org/kl/fileadmin/pdfdownloads/Acts/ForestConservationandManagementActNo34of2016.pdf; accessed on 2 May 2019. Google Scholar

56.

Roy DP, Boschetti L. 2009. Southern Africa validation of the MODIS, L3JRC and GlobCarbon burnt-area products. IEEE [Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers] Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing 47(4):1032–1044.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TGRS.2008.2009000Google Scholar

57.

Roy DP, Boschetti L, Justice CO, Ju J. 2008. The collection 5 MODIS burned area product global evaluation by comparison with the MODIS active fire product. Remote Sensing of Environment 112:3690–3707.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.rse.2008.05.013Google Scholar

58.

Roy DP, Frost PGH, Justice CO, Landmann T, Le Roux JL, Gumbo K, Makungwa S, Dunham K, Du Toit R, Mhwandagara K, et al 2005. The Southern Africa Fire Network (SAFNet) regional burnt-area product-validation protocol. International Journal of Remote Sensing 26(19):4265–4292.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01431160500113096Google Scholar

59.

Ruiz, JAM, Lázaro JRG, Cano IA, Leal PH. 2014. Burned area mapping in the North American boreal forest using terra-MODIS LTDR (2001–2011): a comparison with the MCD45A1, MCD64A1 and BA GEOLAND-2 products. Remote Sensing 6:815–840.  http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/rs6010815Google Scholar

60.

Satendra, Kaushik AD. 2014. Forest Fire Disaster Management. New Delhi, India: National Institute of Disaster Management, Ministry of Home Affairs. Google Scholar

61.

Sekhon JS. 2011. Multivariate and propensity score matching software with automated balance optimization: The matching package for R. Journal of Statistical Software 42(7).  http://dx.doi.org/10.18637/jss.v042.i07Google Scholar

62.

Sharma NR, Farias Fernandes PJ, Pokharel JR. 2015. Methodological development for forest fire hazard mapping in Nepal. Brazilian Journal of Cartography 66:1551–1566. Google Scholar

63.

Smith AMS, Kolden CA, Paveglio TB, Cochrane MA, Bowman DMJS, Moritz MA, Kliskey AD, Alessa L, Hudak AT, Hoffman CM, et al 2016. The science of firescapes: Achieving fire-resilient communities. BioScience 66:130–146.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/biosci/biv182Google Scholar

64.

Sonti SH. 2015. Application of geographic information system (GIS) in forest management. Journal of Geography and Natural Disasters 5:145.  http://dx.doi.org/10.4172/2167-0587.1000145Google Scholar

65.

Tansey K, Grégoire JM, Stroppiana D, Sousa A, Silva J, Pereira JMC, Boschetti L, Maggi M, Brivio PA, Fraser R, et al. 2004. Vegetation burning in the year 2000: Global burnt area estimates from SPOT VEGETATION data. Journal of Geophysical Research 109, D14S03.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2003JD003598Google Scholar

66.

Tsela PL, van Helden P, Frost P, Wessels K, Archibald S. 2010. Validation of the MODIS burned-area products across different biomes in South Africa. In: Proceedings of the 2010 IEEE International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium (IGARSS). Honolulu, HI: IEEE, pp 3652–3655.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/IGARSS.2010.5650253Google Scholar

67.

UNESCO [United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization]. 2013. Decisions Adopted by the World Heritage Committee at its 37th Session (Phnom Penh, 2013) WHC-13/37.COM/20. Paris, France, 5 July 2013, pp 156–159.  http://whc.unesco.org/archive/2013/whc13-37com-20-en.pdf; accessed on 15 October 2019. Google Scholar

68.

Unsworth CP, Cowper M, McLaughlin S, Mulgrew B. 1999. Detection of nonlinearity in a time-series by the synthesis of surrogate data using a Kolmogorov-Smirnoff tested, hidden Markov model. Conference Record of the Thirty-Third Asilomar Conference on Signals, Systems, and Computers (Cat. No.CH37020) 1:696–699.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ACSSC.1999.832418Google Scholar

69.

Wass P. 2000. Kenya's Forest Resource Assessment. Addis Ababa, Ethiopia: European Commission Directorate-general VIII development, EC-FAO Partnership Programme (1998-2002). Google Scholar

70.

Wooller MJ, Swain DL, Ficken KJ, Agnew ADQ, Street-Perrott FA, Eglinton G. 2002. Late quaternary vegetation changes around Lake Rutundu, Mt. Kenya, East Africa: Evidence from grass cuticles, pollen and stable carbon isotopes. Journal of Quaternary Science 18(1):3–15.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jqs.725Google Scholar

71.

Young TP, Peacock MM. 1992. Giant senecios and alpine vegetation in Mt. Kenya. Journal of Ecology 80(1):141–148.  http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2261071Google Scholar
© 2019 Poletti et al. This open access article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). Please credit the authors and the full source.
Claudio Poletti, Gergo Dioszegi, Kevin Wafula Nyongesa, Harald Vacik, Marco Barbujani, and John Ngugi Kigomo "Characterization of Forest Fires to Support Monitoring and Management of Mount Kenya Forest," Mountain Research and Development 39(3), R1-R12, (15 August 2019). https://doi.org/10.1659/MRD-JOURNAL-D-18-00104.1
Published: 15 August 2019
KEYWORDS
Africa
burned area
Fire management
fire regime
Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS)
remote sensing
vegetation
Back to Top