35 research outputs found
Percolation in real Wildfires
This paper focuses on the statistical properties of wild-land fires and, in
particular, investigates if spread dynamics relates to simple invasion model.
The fractal dimension and lacunarity of three fire scars classified from
satellite imagery are analysed. Results indicate that the burned clusters
behave similarly to percolation clusters on boundaries and look more dense in
their core. We show that Dynamical Percolation reproduces this behaviour and
can help to describe the fire evolution. By mapping fire dynamics onto the
percolation models the strategies for fire control might be improved.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, epl sytle (epl.cls included
Le formazioni erbacee del retroduna del Parco Nazionale del Circeo
The wet meadows and saltmarsh communities behind the dunes of the Circeo National Park (Latium, Centra Italy) are described. They make a complex, high-diversity mosaic in which floristic and vegetational elements, otherwise rare along the latial shoreline, can still be found
Ecosystem classification and mapping: a proposal for italian landscapes
This paper deals with the development of a hierarchical land classification for describing and mapping landscapes at different scales. After a brief overview of the theoretical background, an integrative framework is proposed which incorporates different hierarchical levels from plant sociology as diagnostic attributes. The feasibility of this proposal has been tested in different sample landscapes in central Italy. This system has a potential for applications to Italian landscapes from national to local scales, because it is based on solid theory and on information which is generally available in Italy
Percolation in real wildfires
This paper focuses on the statistical properties of wild-land fires
and, in particular, investigates if spread dynamics relates to simple
invasion model. The fractal dimension and lacunarity of three fire
scars classified from satellite imagery are analysed. Results
indicate that the burned clusters behave similarly to percolation
clusters on boundaries and look denser in their core. We show that
Dynamical Percolation reproduces this behaviour and can help to
describe the fire evolution. By mapping fire dynamics onto the
percolation models, the strategies for fire control might be improved