home_top_banner03
ImageMonth_menu
dyk_dashedlines03
ImageMonth_title
IMAGE1_angkorWat_th02
   

 

Indochina fires
 

True colour MODIS image with fires identified as red squares, January 28, 2007

Full resolution image (3.5MB)

Mekong Basin a regional hot spot for fires

During the dry season, when many fires are lit to burn crop residue on agricultural fields, mainland Southeast Asia is one of the hot spots of the world! The MODIS sensor is keeping a watchful eye on the situation, detecting nearly every major fire in the region and elsewhere around the globe, as shown in the global composite image.

The first MODIS picture is a composite image that shows the location of all the fires in the eastern hemisphere during the period of January 1 to January 10, 2007. Each colored dot shows the location that the MODIS on either the Terra or Aqua satellite detected at least one fire during this period. Colors range from red where the fire count is low to yellow where number of fires is large. Many of the fires (like those in Cambodia) are agricultural.

A detailed view of the region shows the location of fires in the afternoon of January 28, 2007. The dry season generally spans the period of November to April, and during that time, people light many agriculture fires across the region. The causes vary; some fires are set to burn pasture lands in anticipation of new growth from summer rains; others are set to clear parts of the forested land through slash-and-burn agriculture; and some fires are accidental. Although agricultural fires are not necessarily immediately hazardous, such large-scale burning can have a strong impact on weather, climate, human health, and natural resources. The high-resolution image showing the Mekong and Tole Sap rivers has a spatial resolution of 250 meters.

The MODIS Rapid Response Team provides daily images of the area in a variety of resolutions and formats: see the Indochina subset.

Image Credit: MODIS Rapid Response Team.