Instituto de Pesquisa Ambiental da Amazônia, Avenida Nazaré 669, Belém, PA 66035-170, Brazil.
Ecol Appl. 2011 Oct;21(7):2397-412. doi: 10.1890/10-1168.1.
Widespread occurrence of fires in Amazonian forests is known to be associated with extreme droughts, but historical data on the location and extent of forest fires are fundamental to determining the degree to which climate conditions and droughts have affected fire occurrence in the region. We used remote sensing to derive a 23-year time series of annual landscape-level burn scars in a fragmented forest of the eastern Amazon. Our burn scar data set is based on a new routine developed for the Carnegie Landsat Analysis System (CLAS), called CLAS-BURN, to calculate a physically based burn scar index (BSI) with an overall accuracy of 93% (Kappa coefficient 0.84). This index uses sub-pixel cover fractions of photosynthetic vegetation, non-photosynthetic vegetation, and shade/burn scar spectral end members. From 23 consecutive Landsat images processed with the CLAS-BURN algorithm, we quantified fire frequencies, the variation in fire return intervals, and rates of conversion of burned forest to other land uses in a 32 400 km2 area. From 1983 to 2007, 15% of the forest burned; 38% of these burned forests were subsequently deforested, representing 19% of the area cleared during the period of observation. While 72% of the fire-affected forest burned only once during the 23-year study period, 20% burned twice, 6% burned three times, and 2% burned four or more times, with the maximum of seven times. These frequencies suggest that the current fire return interval is 5-11 times more frequent than the estimated natural fire regime. Our results also quantify the substantial influence of climate and extreme droughts caused by a strong El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) on the extent and likelihood of returning forest fires mainly in fragmented landscapes. These results are an important indication of the role of future warmer climate and deforestation in enhancing emissions from more frequently burned forests in the Amazon.
亚马逊森林火灾的广泛发生与极端干旱有关,但关于森林火灾的位置和范围的历史数据对于确定气候条件和干旱对该地区火灾发生的影响程度至关重要。我们使用遥感技术从亚马逊东部一个破碎森林中获得了 23 年的年度景观级火烧迹地时间序列。我们的火烧迹地数据集基于卡内基陆地卫星分析系统(CLAS)中开发的一项新例程,称为 CLAS-BURN,用于计算基于物理的火烧迹地指数(BSI),总体精度为 93%(Kappa 系数 0.84)。该指数使用光合植被、非光合植被和阴影/火烧迹地光谱端元的亚像元覆盖分数。从 23 张连续的经过 CLAS-BURN 算法处理的陆地卫星图像中,我们量化了火灾频率、火灾返回间隔的变化以及在 32400 平方公里的区域内火烧森林向其他土地用途转化的速率。从 1983 年到 2007 年,15%的森林被烧毁;其中 38%的烧毁森林随后被砍伐,占观察期内清理面积的 19%。虽然在 23 年的研究期间,72%的受火灾影响的森林仅燃烧了一次,但有 20%的森林燃烧了两次,6%的森林燃烧了三次,2%的森林燃烧了四次或更多次,最多达到了七次。这些频率表明,当前的火灾返回间隔比估计的自然火灾周期频繁 5-11 倍。我们的结果还量化了气候的重大影响以及强烈厄尔尼诺南方涛动(ENSO)引起的极端干旱对主要在破碎景观中森林火灾的范围和可能性的影响。这些结果表明,未来更温暖的气候和森林砍伐将在多大程度上增强亚马逊地区更频繁燃烧的森林的排放,这是一个重要的指示。