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Estimating the spatial pattern of human-caused forest fires using a generalized linear mixed model with spatial autocorrelation in South Korea

Authors
Kwak, HanbinLee, Woo-KyunSaborowski, JoachimLee, Si-YoungWon, Myoung-SooKoo, Kyo-SangLee, Myung-BoKim, Su-Na
Issue Date
2012
Publisher
TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
Keywords
word; forest fire; spatial statistics; variogram; GLMM
Citation
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GEOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION SCIENCE, v.26, no.9, pp.1589 - 1602
Indexed
SCIE
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GEOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION SCIENCE
Volume
26
Number
9
Start Page
1589
End Page
1602
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/109436
DOI
10.1080/13658816.2011.642799
ISSN
1365-8816
Abstract
Most forest fires in Korea are spatially concentrated in certain areas and are highly related to human activities. These site-specific characteristics of forest fires are analyzed by spatial regression analysis using the R-module generalized linear mixed model (GLMM), which can consider spatial autocorrelation. We examined the quantitative effect of topology, human accessibility, and forest cover without and with spatial autocorrelation. Under the assumption that slope, elevation, aspect, population density, distance from road, and forest cover are related to forest fire occurrence, the explanatory variables of each of these factors were prepared using a Geographic Information System-based process. First, we tried to test the influence of fixed effects on the occurrence of forest fires using a generalized linear model (GLM) with Poisson distribution. In addition, the overdispersion of the response data was also detected, and variogram analysis was performed using the standardized residuals of GLM. Second, GLMM was applied to consider the obvious residual autocorrelation structure. The fitted models were validated and compared using the multiple correlation and root mean square error (RMSE). Results showed that slope, elevation, aspect index, population density, and distance from road were significant factors capable of explaining the forest fire occurrence. Positive spatial autocorrelation was estimated up to a distance of 32 km. The kriging predictions based on GLMM were smoother than those of the GLM. Finally, a forest fire occurrence map was prepared using the results from both models. The fire risk decreases with increasing distance to areas with high population densities, and increasing elevation showed a suppressing effect on fire occurrence. Both variables are in accordance with the significance tests.
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생명과학대학 (환경생태공학부)
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