The Southern High Resolution Modeling Consortium (SHRMC) is providing daily forecasts of ground level particulate matter concentrations resulting from wildfires in the southeastern U.S. using the BlueSky smoke modeling framework developed by the U.S. Forest Service. Forecast results are displayed using Google Earth which provides an intuitive interface for displaying spatial information. Visit http://shrmc.ggy.uga.edu/ge/ for more information and to use these products. (Posted June 4, 2007)
Fire in the Southern Appalachian Region
Fires in Southern Appalachia have a direct effect on the biology, ecology, and economy of the region. Whether fires are naturally occurring or prescribed, having access to information describing impacts, benefits, prevention, and management is crucial. SAIN is working to identify partners and stakeholders in the region to provide information to:
Determine fire risk
Prevent wildfires
Study fire history
Keep up-to-date on the current safety procedures
Know how fire interacts with fuel, weather, and topography
Determine impacts to organisms and their environment
Use fire to restore/maintain ecosystems
Plan for emergency situations
A major partner of SAIN in this effort is the Southern Fire Portal, part of the NBII's Fire Research and Management Exchange System (FRAMES). The goal of the Southern Fire Portal is to provides free and easy access to fire information through fire related publications, datasets, databases, decision-support tools, models, glossaries, interactive CD-ROMs, videos, and state-of-the-knowledge literature syntheses.
Regional Fire Resources
Southern Fire Portal
FRAMES - Southern Fire Portal
The Southern Fire Portal (SFP) is a geographic focus of the Fire Research and Management Exchange System (FRAMES).
The SFP improves fire science organization and accessibility by integrating and expanding three comprehensive, complementary sources of fire information:
As a nexus of fire effects information and technology transfer, the Southern Fire Portal is the Southeast's gateway for continuing collaboration between fire management and research communities and their publics.
Visit the SFP for fire-related research data, documents, projects, tools, and Web sites.
The NBII Program is administered by the Biological Informatics Office of the U.S. Geological Survey