Expansion
of the Wildland-Urban Interface (WUI)
Updated 5 August 2007
Expansion of
low-density residential development at the wildland-urban interface has been widely
recognized as a primary factor influencing the management of US national
forests. We estimated the location, extent, and trends in expansion of the
wildland-urban interface (WUI) in the continental
"High" severity applies to vegetation types in which
stand-replacing fires dominate both historical and recent fire regimes, e.g.,
lodgepole pine forest.
"Low" severity applies where fuels and climate foster mostly
low-intensity fires, e.g., aspen-birch forest.
"High (historically low or variable)" applies to vegetation
types in which fires historically were of low or variable intensity, but
recently have often burned at high intensity because of a century of fire
exclusion, e.g., southwestern ponderosa pine forest.
In 2000, the WUI
that includes a 3.2 km community protection zone occupied 465,614 km2,
and contained over 12.5 million housing units. This is an expansion of over 52%
from 1970, and by 2030 the WUI is likely to expand to at least 513,670 km2
with the greatest expansion occurring in the intermountain west states. Roughly
89% of the WUI is privately owned land and about 65% of the WUI occurs in high
or high (historically low or variable) severity fire regime classes.
For
more information, please see:
Theobald, D.M. and W. Romme. (in press). Expansion of the
High resolution map of the WUI in 2000
(600 dpi PDF).
High resolution map of the WUI in 2000
(1200 dpi PDF).
Download
ArcGIS raster data of high wildfire hazard.
Download
ArcGIS shapefiles of high wildfire hazard for 1970 and 2000.
Research
conducted at