Abstract:
Sri Lanka, the continental island that covers the 65,610 km2 of land surface. The country
could be named as one of the highly vulnerable countries for the hazards like, flood, landslide,
drought, forest fire and animal attack. Seasonal changes of climate act as an encouraging factors
for those hazards. The selected study area covers eleven Grama Niladhari divisions and 72 km2
land of the Imbulpe divisional secretariat division of Rathnapura district. The forest fire hazard
could be named as a seasonal hazard that appears in the study area during the dry season. To
assess the forest fire risk of the area four factors; slope, aspect of the land, elevation and landuse had been considered. Land-use of the area was identified using Landsat 8 images and Arc
GIS supervised classification tool. Digital contour data were used to create maps of elevation,
slope and aspect. The created maps were overlaid by using weighted overlay method in Arc GIS
to create forest fire vulnerability map. The created forest fire vulnerability map was overlaid
with settlement and road distribution maps to create the forest fire risk map. In addition to that,
techniques of Participatory Rural Appraisal (PRA) method were used to collect data from the
inhabitants of the study region. Forest fire vulnerability were categorized under the five groups.
From the total land approximately 14.1 km2 of land is under the very highly vulnerable category
and according to the risk map, 7.08 km2
land belongs to the very high risk zone. Through the
study revealed that the forest fire is a human induce hazard. The mythical belief about rain and
the purpose of hunting were led peoples to fire the forest. Increase awareness about the value
of forest through awareness program and implication of legal actions against to the guilty ones
could be suggested as possible mitigation activities.