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State of the Climate
U.S. Wildfire
Annual 2006

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

National Climatic Data Center


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U.S. Wildfire Report
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U.S. Wildfire Report


Canadian Large Fires - 5 December 2006
Canadian Large Fires – 5 December 2006

Although drought persisted in the middle of the country in November, large wildland fire activity was concentrated in western Canada. In the U.S. the major incidents were concentrated in two areas: Oklahoma–Arkansas–Missouri and Kentucky.

U.S. Drought Monitor (USDM) map from 28 November 2006
U.S. Drought Monitor map
from 28 November 2006

The fire season abated in December. There were over 96,000 wildland fires in the U.S. since the beginning of 2006, and almost 10 million acres were burned, according to estimates from the National Interagency Fire Center. The preliminary number of acres burned is a record.

2006 Wildfire Statistics (from NIFC):
Totals Nationwide Number of Fires Nationwide Number of Acres Burned
12/29/2006 96,326 9,871,863
12/31/2005 66,552 8,686,753
12/31/2004 77,534 6,790,692
12/31/2003 85,943 4,918,088
12/31/2002 88,458 6,937,584
12/31/2001 84,079 3,555,138
12/31/2000 122,827 8,422,237

Dead fuel moisture levels remained very dry mostly in the Southwest in November. The 10–hour fuel moisture levels on 4 December were extremely dry in southern California, southern Nevada and western Arizona. Medium fuels (30 November 100–hr) were extremely dry in an area of southern Nevada and western Arizona. Larger fuels (30 November 1000–hr) remained unusually dry over the past month from the California–Arizona–Mexico border northward into central Nevada.

The Keetch–Byram Drought Index (KBDI), a widely used index for fire risk, had the largest potential for wildland fire activity in the contiguous U.S. in southern California, Nevada, southwestern Arizona, and in eastern Georgia and the northern Florida peninsula. The observed experimental fire potential index at the beginning of December was anomalously high from southern California eastward through southern Nevada, Arizona, and western New Mexico.

Historically, the graphs below show that the number of fires has been decreasing since the 1980s. However, the number of acres burned has been increasing. In Alaska the number of fires was the highest in the early 1990s.

U.S. Historical Fire Pattern
Historical U.S. Patterns
Alaska Historical Fire Pattern
Alaska Patterns


Questions?

For questions on technical or scientific content of this report, please contact:

Karsten Shein:
Karsten.Shein@noaa.gov

For general climate monitoring questions, please contact:

CMB.Contact@noaa.gov

For climate data orders, please contact the National Climatic Data Center's Climate Services and Monitoring Division:

NCDC.Orders@noaa.gov

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