Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

You are here: Home Our Resources Literature Defining and predicti...

Defining and predicting urban-wildland interface zones using a GIS-based model

Author: Gering, L.R.; Chun, A.V.; Anderson, S.
Date: [1999]
Periodical: In: Proceedings Integrated Tools for Natural Resources Inventories in the 21 st Century: An International Conference on the Inventory and Monitoring of Forested Ecosystems; 1998 August 16-20; Boise, ID
Abstract: Resource managers are beginning to experience a deluge of management conflicts as urban population centers expand into formerly wildland settings. Fire suppression, recreational, watershed management, and traditional forest management practices are activities that have become contentious in many locales. A better understanding of the interface zone between these two types of land is important if managers are to successfully maintain the values of such lands. A pragmatic model for defining the urban-wildland interface for LeFlore County, Oklahoma was developed, allowing identification of these transitional zones. Census data were used to obtain information on housing densities, population densities and other social and cultural activities. Landsat MSS images provided a description of the current land cover and land use of the study area. Additional data (such as digital soil maps) were processed and added to the GIS structure. On-site ground truthing was also conducted.


Personal tools

powered by Southern Regional Extension Forestry