posted on 2025-03-01, 03:46authored byJing Li, Shankar Mahalingam, David R. Weise
This data publication contains bulk density measurements from two typical species of chaparral shrub which were harvested in 2010 from the North Mountain Experimental Area near Riverside, CA (NMEA), namely chamise (Adenostoma fasciculatum) and manzanita (Arctostaphylos sp.). Data include shrub height, crown length, crown width, crown base height, and moisture content, as well as total mass, mass by fuel particle size class, crown volume, and calculated bulk density by shrub height segments. Also included are fire characteristics data from a companion study of fire behavior in similar individual 4-year old live chamise shrubs. The fire behavior data include shrub bulk density, moisture content and total mass consumed during each experimental run for multiple bulk density classes, wind speeds, and ignition methods. Burn time, horizontal and vertical flame spread rates, flame length and flame angle, as well as maximum mass loss rate and peak gas temperatures were also recorded. The R code used to analyze these fire characteristics in Li et al. 2017 is also included. Chaparral shrub bulk density data were collected to examine their vertical distribution for two typical species of shrub fuels, chamise and manzanita since these data are not common and physically-based fire spread models require this information. A companion study was then conducted to examine the effects on shrub canopy characteristics on fire spread through a single shrub. The specific objective was to characterize fire progression through a chamise shrub in terms of fire spread rate, gas temperature, heat flux, and solid fuel mass evolution for several different combinations of bulk density, wind velocity, and ignition location, which has not frequently been studied in the past. Original metadata date was 11/30/2016. Minor metadata updates were made on 09/03/2016.
These data were collected using funding from the U.S. Government and can be used without additional permissions or fees. If you use these data in a publication, presentation, or other research product please use the following citation:
Li, Jing; Mahalingam, Shankar; Weise, David R. 2016. Chaparral shrub bulk density and fire behavior. Fort Collins, CO: Forest Service Research Data Archive. https://doi.org/10.2737/RDS-2016-0031
All shrub fuels were collected from North Mountain Experimental Area (NMEA) 50 kilometers east of Riverside, CA at an elevation of 1160 meters. The latitude and longitude: 33.844 N, -116.880 W