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NWCG Glossary of Wildland Fire, PMS 205

Overview

The NWCG Glossary of Wildland Fire provides an extensive listing of approved terms and definitions used by the NWCG community. It contains terms commonly used by NWCG in the areas of wildland fire and incident management and is not intended to list all terms used by NWCG groups and member agencies. The NWCG has directed that all committee and subgroup product glossaries be contained within the NWCG Glossary of Wildland Fire to maintain definition consistency and clarity among documents.

Comments, questions, and recommendations shall be submitted to the appropriate agency program manager assigned to the Data Standards and Terminology Board (DSTB). 

NWCG Glossary of Wildland Fire, PMS 205  (Quick View)

EDG Explorer is a database platform used for managing NWCG Glossary terms.  The following table is a quick view of the terms found in EDG. More detailed information such as rules, documentation, and term relationships may be viewed in EDG Explorer.  

Note: If the NWCG Glossary of Wildland Fire is not displaying below please report it to NWCG Webmaster

Title Steward Status Definition
fire sensitive tree FUSC Fire Use Subcommittee Approved

A species with thin bark or highly flammable foliage that has a relatively greater probability of being killed or scarred by a fire.

fire service IOSC Incident Operations Subcommittee Archived

The organized fire protection service; its members, individually and collectively; allied organizations assisting protection agencies.

fire severity FUSC Fire Use Subcommittee Approved

Degree to which a site has been altered or disrupted by fire; loosely, a product of fire intensity and residence time.

fire shelter RMC Risk Management Committee, ETC Equipment Technology Committee Approved

An aluminized cloth tent that offers protection in a fire entrapment situation by reflecting radiant heat and providing a volume of breathable air.

fire shelter deployment RMC Risk Management Committee Approved

Removing a fire shelter from its case and unfolding it to use as protection against heat, smoke, and burning embers.

fire shelter deployment site RMC Risk Management Committee Approved

Immediate area where a fire shelter has been deployed.

fire shovel ETC Equipment Technology Committee Approved

Type of shovel specifically designed for use in constructing a fireline; has a tapered blade with both edges sharpened for scraping, digging, grubbing, cutting, and throwing.

fire simulator IPSC Incident and Position Standards Committee Archived

Training device that imposes simulated fire and smoke on a landscape image, for the purpose of instructing fire suppression personnel in different fire situations and fire suppression techniques.

fire size class code FRSC Fire Reporting Subcommittee Approved

A code that corresponds to one of several ranges of fire size based on the number of acres within the final fire perimeter.

fire sketch WFISC Wildland Fire Investigation Subcommittee Approved

A not to scale drawing.

fire spread model FBSC Fire Behavior Subcommittee Approved

A set of physics and empirical equations that form a mathematical representation of the behavior of fire in uniform wildland fuels.

fire storm FBSC Fire Behavior Subcommittee Approved

Violent convection caused by a large continuous area of intense fire. Often characterized by destructively violent surface indrafts, near and beyond the perimeter, and sometimes by tornado-like whirls.

fire strategy In Development
fire suppressant ETC Equipment Technology Committee Approved

Any agent used to extinguish the flaming and glowing phases of combustion by direct application to the burning fuel.

fire suppression IOSC Incident Operations Subcommittee Approved

All work and activities connected with control and fire-extinguishing operations, beginning with discovery and continuing until the fire is completely extinguished.

fire suppression organization (area) IOSC Incident Operations Subcommittee Approved

The personnel responsible for fire suppression within a specified area.

fire suppression organization (fire) IOSC Incident Operations Subcommittee Approved

The personnel and equipment collectively assigned to the suppression of a specific fire or group of fires.

fire suppression organization (management structure) IOSC Incident Operations Subcommittee Approved

The management structure, usually shown in the form of an organization chart of the persons and groups having specific responsibilities in fire suppression.

fire swatter ETC Equipment Technology Committee Approved

A fire tool that consists of a thick, flat piece of rubber on a long handle used to drag over or smother out flames of grass fires.

fire tool cache ETC Equipment Technology Committee Approved

A supply of fire tools and equipment assembled in planned quantities or standard units at a strategic point for exclusive use in wildland operations.

fire trap (material accumulation) FWS Fire Weather Subcommittee Approved

An accumulation of highly combustible material, rendering firefighting dangerous.

fire trap (situational) FWS Fire Weather Subcommittee Approved

Any situation in which it is highly dangerous to fight fire.

fire treatment FUSC Fire Use Subcommittee Approved

The use of fire to accomplish a specified objective.

fire triangle FBSC Fire Behavior Subcommittee Approved

Instructional aid in which the sides of a triangle are used to represent the three factors (oxygen, heat, fuel) necessary for combustion and flame production; removal of any of the three factors causes flame production to cease.

fire type FMB Fire Management Board Approved

A management distinction, made to satisfy legal and budget constraints, based on whether the ignition source was planned or unplanned. Under the implementation guidance, only two types of wildland fire - wildfire and prescribed fire - are recognized.

fire vector WFISC Wildland Fire Investigation Subcommittee Approved

The direction of fire spread identified as one of three categories: advancing, lateral, or backing.

fire weather FWS Fire Weather Subcommittee Approved

Weather conditions which influence fire ignition, behavior, and suppression.

fire weather forecast FWS Fire Weather Subcommittee Approved

A weather prediction specially prepared for use in wildland fire operations and prescribed fire.

Fire Weather Index FDSC Fire Danger Subcommittee Approved

A numerical rating in the Canadian fire danger rating system, based on meteorological measurements of fire intensity in a standard fuel type. (The standard fuel type is representative of jack pine and lodgepole pine.) The FWI is comprised of three fuel moisture codes, covering classes of forest fuel of different drying rates, and two indices that represent rate of spread and the amount of available fuel. 

fire weather station FWS Fire Weather Subcommittee Approved

A meteorological station specially equipped to measure weather elements that have an important effect on fire behavior.

fire weather watch FWS Fire Weather Subcommittee Approved

A Fire Weather Watch is issued to advise of conditions which could result in extensive wildland fire occurrence or extreme fire behavior, which are expected to develop in the next 12 to 48 hours, but not more than 72 hours. In cases of dry lightning, a Fire Weather Watch may be issued for the next 12 hours. 

fire whirl FWS Fire Weather Subcommittee Approved

Spinning vortex column of ascending hot air and gases rising from a fire and carrying aloft smoke, debris, and flame. Fire whirls range in size from less than one foot to over 500 feet in diameter. Large fire whirls have the intensity of a small tornado.

Fire Year Approved
fire-day FDSC Fire Danger Subcommittee Approved

Standard 24-hour period beginning at 1000 hours, during which most wildfires undergo a predictable speeding up and slowing down of intensity, depending primarily on the influence of weather and fuel factors.

fire-flood cycle FWS Fire Weather Subcommittee Approved

The greatly increased rate of water run off and soil movement from steep slopes that may follow removal of the vegetative cover by burning.

fire-proofing IOSC Incident Operations Subcommittee Approved

Removal or treatment of fuels to reduce the danger of fires igniting or spreading. (E.g., fire-proofing roadsides, campsites, structural timber.) Protection is relative, not absolute.

firebrand FBSC Fire Behavior Subcommittee Approved

Any source of heat, natural or human made, capable of igniting wildland fuels. Flaming or glowing fuel particles that can be carried naturally by wind, convection currents, or by gravity into unburned fuels.

firebreak IOSC Incident Operations Subcommittee Approved

A natural or constructed barrier used to stop or check fires that may occur, or to provide a control line from which to work.

FIRECAST FWS Fire Weather Subcommittee Approved

Set of computerized FIREMODELS run during fire season at the operations coordination center on preselected locations to indicate possible fire spread from those points for that date.

FireCode IBC Incident Business Committee Approved

A standardized code used by the federal wildland fire agencies/bureau assigned to effectively track and compile cost information for emergency suppression expenditures. The FireCode is incorporated into each agency’s accounting code structure.

firefighter IOSC Incident Operations Subcommittee Archived

Person whose principal function is fire suppression.

firefighting forces IOSC Incident Operations Subcommittee Approved

Qualified firefighters, together with their equipment and material, used to suppress wildland fires.

fireground WFISC Wildland Fire Investigation Subcommittee Approved

Operational area on which firefighters combat a fire.

Firelamp (Fire and Land Management Planning) FUSC Fire Use Subcommittee Approved

Computerized multi-resource model that simulates the effects that naturally caused prescribed fires have on the future production of natural resources such as timber, forage, wildlife, recreation, and water.

fireline (administration) IBC Incident Business Committee Approved

For purposes of pay administration for hazardous duty, a fireline is defined as the area within or adjacent to the perimeter of an uncontrolled wildfire of any size in which action is being taken to control fire. Such action includes operations, which directly support control of fire (e.g. activities to extinguish the fire, ground scouting, spot fire patrolling, search and rescue operations, and backfiring).

fireline (line) IOSC Incident Operations Subcommittee Approved

The part of a containment or control line that is scraped or dug to mineral soil.

Fireline Explosives ETC Equipment Technology Committee Approved

Specially developed coils containing explosive powder that are detonated to create a fireline through ground fuels.

fireline intensity (heat release) FBSC Fire Behavior Subcommittee Approved

The product of the available heat of combustion per unit of ground and the rate of spread of the fire, interpreted as the heat released per unit of time for each unit length of fire edge. The primary unit is Btu per second per foot (Btu/sec/ft) of fire front.

fireline intensity (rate) FBSC Fire Behavior Subcommittee Approved

The rate of heat release per unit time per unit length of fire front. Numerically, it is the product of the heat yield, the quantity of fuel consumed in the fire front, and the rate of spread.

FIRESCOPE IOSC Incident Operations Subcommittee Archived

Firefighting Resources of California Organized for Potential Emergencies. A multi-agency coordination system designed to improve the capabilities of California's wildland fire protection agencies. Its purpose is to provide more efficient resources allocation and utilization, particularly in multiple or large fire situations during critical burning conditions. 

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Modified / Reviewed:

NWCG Latest Announcements

Safety Warning 23-01: Non-Specification Fire Shelters

Date: March 10, 2023
Contact: David Maclay-Schulte, Equipment Specialist, 406-329-3965 

Issue:  Non-specification fire shelters are being advertised and sold on the open market as meeting Forest Service (FS) specification 5100-606 requirements.
The non-specification shelters are made from unknown materials and components that have not been tested and certified to ensure compliance with specification requirements. The unspecified materials can impact the performance and safety of the non-specification fire shelter if utilized in a deployment.

References:

Equipment Bulletin 23-01: Discontinuation of Shelf Stable Food Boxes (NFES 7478) in NISC

Date: March 7, 2023
Contact: Sam Wu, 909-731-9072

The shelf stable food box pilot program has concluded. While the item received positive field feedback, it is both labor-intensive and cost-prohibitive to continue offering. It will be discontinued and not available from the National Interagency Support Cache (NISC) system.
A Cache Memo will be distributed to the National Interagency Cache System for direction to remove the Shelf Stable Food Boxes from the National Interagency Cache System.

References:

2023 Transition Plan for Complex Incident Management

Date: January 25, 2023
Contact: Shane McDonald and Jesse Bender

This memorandum provides NWCG direction for the continued transition to Complex Incident Management (CIM).
The NWCG Standards for Wildland Fire Position Qualifications, PMS 310-1, includes the position qualification requirements for the seven Complex Command and General Staff (C&GS) positions. The NWCG Field Evaluation Form will be an option for Complex certification until January 1, 2025. The NWCG Wildland Fire Risk and Complexity Assessment (RCA), PMS 236, has been updated to include Part D:  Functional Complexity and Complex Incident Complexity Indicators.

References:

 

2023 NWCG Executive Board Annual Letter

Date: January 24, 2023
Contact: NWCG Executive Board

As NWCG continues to implement our role in modernizing the wildland fire workforce, looking forward to 2023 it is clear the portfolio of critical work within NWCG extends beyond highlighted accomplishments or identified priorities. Nevertheless, we expect the continuation of the high tempo operational pace so acknowledging there will be important matters competing for limited time and staff, the EB identifies the following as priorities for the upcoming year:

  • Incident Performance and Training Modernization (IPTM)
  • Complex Incident Management (CIM)
  • Standardized Business Practices 

Thank you for the critically important work you will do in the coming year.

References: