Fire severity map of the major fires in Gippsland and north east Victoria in 2019/20 (version 1.0)
  • MetaShare PROD
  •  
  •  
  •  

  Fire severity map of the major fires in Gippsland and north east Victoria in 2019/20 (version 1.0)

dataset: BUSHFIRE_SEVERITY_EAST_AND_NORTHEAST_VICTORIA_2019-20
Fire severity classification of bushfires (wildfires) impacting ~1.5 million hectares of predominantly forested public land in eastern and north-eastern Victoria (and ~300,000 ha of southern NSW), between November 2019 and March 2020. Fire severity mapping was derived using machine learning classification (Random forests) of eight Spectral Indices (SI) from pre and post fire Sentinel 2 satellite imagery. The fire severity classification model was trained using high resolution (<35 cm) post-fire near-infrared aerial imagery from 12 bushfires which occurred during the 2018/2019 fire season across areas of Central and Eastern Victoria. A detailed description of the classification methodology can be found in Collins et al. (2018). The classification covers woody vegetation landcover types (including native and non-native forest, woodland and shrubland). The primary purpose of this data to provide rapid and comprehensive landscape-scale spatial information about bushfire severity to inform initial risk assessments on the public land in the actual and potential impact zone. This assists with the transition from response to emergency stabilisation and initial recovery in accordance with the Code of Practice for Bushfire Management on Public Land (2012). Fire severity classes are i) Canopy burnt (Class 6)- CB (> 20% canopy foliage consumed); ii) High canopy scorch (5) - HCS (>80% of canopy foliage is scorched); Medium canopy scorch (4) - MCS (Canopy is a mosaic of both unburnt and scorched foliage, 20 - 80%); iii) Low canopy scorch (3) - LCS (Canopy foliage is largely unaffected (<20% scorched), but the understorey has been burnt); iv) Unburnt (2) - UB (Canopy and understorey foliage are largely (>90%) unburnt). Additional classes: v) No Data (0) (e.g. due to obscuration by cloud, cloud-shadow and/or smoke and haze) and vi) Non-woody vegetation (unclassified) (1). An independent cross-validation of the classification model was used to estimate global and per-class model accuracy. Overall accuracy is estimated to be 85% (0.81 Kappa), with producer per-class accuracy ranging from 97% (CB), 91% (HCS), 88% (UB), 75% (LCS) and 61% (MCS). A ground-based validation of the classification has not been undertaken. Data is provided on the basis that users undertake responsibility for assessing the relevance and accuracy of its content. The Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning, on behalf of the Victorian Government, makes no representations, either expressed or implied, as to the suitability of this data for any particular purpose. We do not accept any liability to any person: - for the information, data or advice (or the use of such information, data or advice) which is provided or incorporated into it by reference - for any interference with or damage to a user's computer, software or data occurring in connection with or relating to this data or its use Related research can be found in L. Collins, P. Griffioen, G. Newell, A. Mellor (2018), The utility of Random Forests for wildfire severity mapping, Remote Sensing of Environment, 216, 374-384
 
Citation proposal Citation proposal
(2022)

Fire severity map of the major fires in Gippsland and north east Victoria in 2019/20 (version 1.0)

Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action

https://metashare.maps.vic.gov.au/geonetwork/srv/eng/catalog.search#/metadata/7b4e8b68-7803-5844-8b12-4edda539cb4d
 
  • Description
  • Contacts
  • Keywords
  • Constraints
  • Extents
  • Acquisition Info
  • Metadata Constraints

Description

Title
Fire severity map of the major fires in Gippsland and north east Victoria in 2019/20 (version 1.0) 
Alternate title
BUSHFIRE_SEVERITY_EAST_AND_NORTHEAST_VICTORIA_2019-20 
Purpose
The primary purpose of this data to provide rapid and comprehensive landscape-scale spatial information about bushfire severity to inform initial risk assessments on the public land in the actual and potential impact zone. This assists with the transition from response to emergency stabilisation and initial recovery in accordance with the Code of Practice for Bushfire Management on Public Land (2012). Further reading on the approach used can be found in the article The Utility of Random Forests for wildfire severity mapping, link to resource: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0034425718303328?via%3Dihub 
Status
Completed  
 
 

Contacts

Cited responsible party  

No information provided.

Cited responsible party  

No information provided.

Cited responsible party  

No information provided.
 
 

Keywords

Topic category
  • Environment
  • Biota
  • Farming
  • Transportation
 
 

Constraints

Classification
Unclassified  
 
 

Extents

Description
General - Victoria 
 
 

Acquisition Info

RFQ Number
 
 

Metadata Constraints

Classification
Unclassified  
 
 

    Overviews

  Provided by

  Share on social sites

         

  Views Views

  • Simple
  • Simple
  • Full
  • XML
7b4e8b68-7803-5844-8b12-4edda539cb4d   Access to the portal Access to the portal Read here the full details and access to the data. Read here the full details and access to the data.

  Associated resources

Not available


  •  
  •  
  •