National Aeronautics and Space Administration Goddard Institute for Space Studies and Columbia University, 2880 Broadway, New York, NY 10025, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2010 Nov 9;107(45):19167-70. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1003669107. Epub 2010 Oct 25.
Recent bursts in the incidence of large wildfires worldwide have raised concerns about the influence climate change and humans might have on future fire activity. Comparatively little is known, however, about the relative importance of these factors in shaping global fire history. Here we use fire and climate modeling, combined with land cover and population estimates, to gain a better understanding of the forces driving global fire trends. Our model successfully reproduces global fire activity record over the last millennium and reveals distinct regimes in global fire behavior. We find that during the preindustrial period, the global fire regime was strongly driven by precipitation (rather than temperature), shifting to an anthropogenic-driven regime with the Industrial Revolution. Our future projections indicate an impending shift to a temperature-driven global fire regime in the 21st century, creating an unprecedentedly fire-prone environment. These results suggest a possibility that in the future climate will play a considerably stronger role in driving global fire trends, outweighing direct human influence on fire (both ignition and suppression), a reversal from the situation during the last two centuries.
最近,世界各地大规模野火的发生率不断上升,这引发了人们对气候变化和人类活动对未来火灾活动可能产生的影响的担忧。然而,人们对这些因素在塑造全球火灾历史方面的相对重要性知之甚少。在这里,我们使用火灾和气候建模,结合土地覆盖和人口估计,来更好地了解驱动全球火灾趋势的力量。我们的模型成功地再现了过去一千年的全球火灾活动记录,并揭示了全球火灾行为的不同模式。我们发现,在工业化前时期,全球火灾模式主要受降水(而不是温度)驱动,随着工业革命的到来,模式转变为受人类活动驱动。我们的未来预测表明,在 21 世纪,全球火灾模式将向受温度驱动的模式转变,这将创造一个前所未有的火灾多发环境。这些结果表明,未来气候可能在驱动全球火灾趋势方面发挥更重要的作用,超过人类对火灾(点火和抑制)的直接影响,这与过去两个世纪的情况正好相反。