What does the FireRadar Canada fire map show?
The FireRadar Canada fire map combines direct official active-fire records where public feeds are available, recent out or extinguished records, optional satellite hotspots, the separate CWFIS national view, wildfire-smoke forecasts, and AQHI observations. Each layer remains distinct so unlike datasets are not presented as one fire count.
How often is the Canada wildfire map updated?
FireRadar refreshes available wildfire data approximately once per hour. Individual provincial, territorial, national, and satellite sources publish on their own schedules, so the newest timestamp can differ between records and layers.
Are satellite hotspots confirmed wildfires?
No. NASA FIRMS VIIRS hotspots are satellite-detected heat signals. They can support situational awareness, but they are not confirmed wildfire incidents, fire perimeters, evacuation zones, or official fire counts.
Why can FireRadar differ from a provincial wildfire map?
FireRadar combines many source systems that can update at different times and use different status definitions. A provincial or territorial authority remains the primary source for local incident details, restrictions, evacuation information, and emergency instructions.
Does FireRadar show every wildfire in Canada?
FireRadar shows records available through the connected public sources. Coverage and published fields vary by jurisdiction, and a missing marker does not prove that no fire, smoke, or local hazard exists.
Where should I check during a wildfire emergency?
Use the responsible provincial, territorial, municipal, First Nations, or emergency-management authority for evacuation orders, alerts, road closures, restrictions, and safety instructions. FireRadar is an informational map and is not an emergency notification service.