Management strategies for prevention of forest fire and environmental degradation in tropics with special reference to Western Ghats of Kerala region, India
Management strategies for prevention of forest fire and environmental degradation in tropics with special reference to Western Ghats of Kerala region, India
Management of forest fire is one of the top priority activities of forest departments, both in tropics and temperate regions. Extensive amount and intensive efforts are deployed to combat fire. The results of a case study on forest fire prone mapping conducted at Periyar tiger reserve in Western Ghats of Kerala, India, was highlighted, and based on the study, the implementation of fire management strategies were discussed. The fire risk map was validated with the forest fire inventory points of Forest Survey of India. Forest fire is a frequent occurrence in tropical forests, especially in moist deciduous and dry deciduous regions. Though forest fire management is one of the major activities of forest departments, the forest fire mitigation is not 100% successful. The magnitude of forest fire, its frequency, potential location, etc., can be assessed using Geoinformatics techniques, by giving different weightage status to fire controlling factors. A case study was conducted on these lines and control measures were highlighted using different management strategies. The implementation of the desired action plan for sustainable development and conservation of forests can be successful only by getting the full support and confidence of the stakeholders. The stakeholder support for environmental management aspects is possible only by convincing them that they are directly or indirectly getting the benefits by the proposed action. Usually, most of the environmental management activities may lead to nontangible benefits, which is apparently non-visible, hence getting stakeholder support may not be an easy task. Various marketing strategies needs to be used to convince the beneficiaries to implement good conservation practices for the betterment of the local inhabitants.
Forest fire management, Geographic information system (GIS), Management strategy
24-33
Menon, A. R.R.
32e115e8-8ef0-4a5b-9f52-d8b9506f2927
Vishnu-Menon, R. G.
cf91657e-cd61-4431-9e25-c6ad94ba9ee0
1 January 2022
Menon, A. R.R.
32e115e8-8ef0-4a5b-9f52-d8b9506f2927
Vishnu-Menon, R. G.
cf91657e-cd61-4431-9e25-c6ad94ba9ee0
Menon, A. R.R. and Vishnu-Menon, R. G.
(2022)
Management strategies for prevention of forest fire and environmental degradation in tropics with special reference to Western Ghats of Kerala region, India.
Journal of Tropical Forest Science, 34 (1), .
(doi:10.26525/jtfs2022.34.1.24).
Abstract
Management of forest fire is one of the top priority activities of forest departments, both in tropics and temperate regions. Extensive amount and intensive efforts are deployed to combat fire. The results of a case study on forest fire prone mapping conducted at Periyar tiger reserve in Western Ghats of Kerala, India, was highlighted, and based on the study, the implementation of fire management strategies were discussed. The fire risk map was validated with the forest fire inventory points of Forest Survey of India. Forest fire is a frequent occurrence in tropical forests, especially in moist deciduous and dry deciduous regions. Though forest fire management is one of the major activities of forest departments, the forest fire mitigation is not 100% successful. The magnitude of forest fire, its frequency, potential location, etc., can be assessed using Geoinformatics techniques, by giving different weightage status to fire controlling factors. A case study was conducted on these lines and control measures were highlighted using different management strategies. The implementation of the desired action plan for sustainable development and conservation of forests can be successful only by getting the full support and confidence of the stakeholders. The stakeholder support for environmental management aspects is possible only by convincing them that they are directly or indirectly getting the benefits by the proposed action. Usually, most of the environmental management activities may lead to nontangible benefits, which is apparently non-visible, hence getting stakeholder support may not be an easy task. Various marketing strategies needs to be used to convince the beneficiaries to implement good conservation practices for the betterment of the local inhabitants.
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Accepted/In Press date: 1 May 2021
Published date: 1 January 2022
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Publisher Copyright:
© Forest Research Institute Malaysia.
Keywords:
Forest fire management, Geographic information system (GIS), Management strategy
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 495121
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/495121
ISSN: 0128-1283
PURE UUID: 51c94bc5-e71a-49f2-9ae2-c774eb0cb6d6
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Date deposited: 29 Oct 2024 17:47
Last modified: 07 Dec 2024 03:16
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Author:
A. R.R. Menon
Author:
R. G. Vishnu-Menon
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