Abstract

Bushfires are an integral part of the forest regeneration cycle in Australia. However, from the perspective of a natural disaster, the impact of bushfires on human settlements and the environment is massive. In Australia, bushfires are the most disastrous natural hazards. According to the records of the Parliament of Australia, the recent catastrophic bushfires in NSW and Victoria burnt out over 10 million hectares of land, a figure more significant than any previous bushfire damage on record. After the deadly 2009 Black Saturday bushfires, which killed 173 people in Victoria, public attention to bushfires reached a new peak. Due to the disastrous consequences of bushfires, scientists have explored various methods to mitigate or even avoid bushfire damage, including the use of bushfire alerts. The present study adds satellite imagery and GIS-based semi-real-time bushfire contents to various bushfire warnings issued by government authorities. The new product will disseminate graphical bushfire contents to rural Australians through social media, using Google Maps. This low-cost Media GIS content can be delivered through highly popular smartphone networks in Australia through social media (Facebook and Twitter). We expect its success to encourage people to participate in disaster mitigation efforts as contributors in a participatory GIS network. This paper presents a case study to demonstrate the production process and the quality of media GIS content and further discusses the potential of using social media through the mobile network of Australia while paying attention to mobile blackspots. Media GIS content has the potential to link with the public information systems of local fire management services, disseminate contents through a mobile app, and develop into a fully automated media GIS content system to expand the service beyond bushfires.

Highlights

  • Bushfires have been an integral part of the dynamics in the Australian environment for all its known history

  • Media Geographic Information System (GIS) contents we introduced in this study can be promoted as a useful information source for rural communities in bushfire-prone regions

  • MODIS satellite imagery can successfully produce “semi-real-time” Media GIS contents to display most of the natural disasters, especially when the disaster continues for several days and effects large areas

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Bushfires (a local term for forest fires) have been an integral part of the dynamics in the Australian environment for all its known history. Australian natural ecosystems have evolved with fire, and the landscape, along with its biological diversity, has been shaped by bushfires [1]. Some Australian flora and fauna have evolved to coexist with bushfires, and in eucalypt forests, fire functions as a vital part of the regeneration cycle of the vegetation. According to the Australian Bureau of meteorology, vast areas of Australia suffer from bushfire threats [2]. These bushfires have become a critical phenomenon as part of Australian natural hazards.

Objectives
Methods
Findings
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call