Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin 53706, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2013 Apr;23(3):565-82. doi: 10.1890/12-1816.1.
National-scale analyses of fire occurrence are needed to prioritize fire policy and management activities across the United States. However, the drivers of national-scale patterns of fire occurrence are not well understood, and how the relative importance of human or biophysical factors varies across the country is unclear. Our research goal was to model the drivers of fire occurrence within ecoregions across the conterminous United States. We used generalized linear models to compare the relative influence of human, vegetation, climate, and topographic variables on fire occurrence in the United States, as measured by MODIS active fire detections collected between 2000 and 2006. We constructed models for all fires and for large fires only and generated predictive maps to quantify fire occurrence probabilities. Areas with high fire occurrence probabilities were widespread in the Southeast, and localized in the Mountain West, particularly in southern California, Arizona, and New Mexico. Probabilities for large-fire occurrence were generally lower, but hot spots existed in the western and south-central United States The probability of fire occurrence is a critical component of fire risk assessments, in addition to vegetation type, fire behavior, and the values at risk. Many of the hot spots we identified have extensive development in the wildland--urban interface and are near large metropolitan areas. Our results demonstrated that human variables were important predictors of both all fires and large fires and frequently exhibited nonlinear relationships. However, vegetation, climate, and topography were also significant variables in most ecoregions. If recent housing growth trends and fire occurrence patterns continue, these areas will continue to challenge policies and management efforts seeking to balance the risks generated by wildfires with the ecological benefits of fire.
需要对全国范围内的火灾发生情况进行分析,以便为美国各地的火灾政策和管理活动确定优先次序。然而,目前人们对全国范围内火灾发生模式的驱动因素还了解甚少,也不清楚在全国范围内,人为因素或生物物理因素的相对重要性是如何变化的。我们的研究目标是在整个美国的生态区范围内,对火灾发生的驱动因素进行建模。我们使用广义线性模型来比较人为因素、植被、气候和地形变量对 2000 年至 2006 年间通过 MODIS 主动火灾探测所测量的美国火灾发生情况的相对影响。我们为所有火灾和大型火灾分别构建了模型,并生成了预测图来量化火灾发生的概率。火灾发生概率高的地区广泛分布在美国东南部,在山地西部则呈局部分布,特别是在加利福尼亚南部、亚利桑那州和新墨西哥州。大型火灾发生概率通常较低,但在美国西部和中南部地区存在热点。火灾发生的概率是火灾风险评估的一个关键组成部分,除了植被类型、火灾行为和风险价值外。我们确定的许多热点都在野地-城市交界地区有广泛的发展,并且靠近大城市地区。我们的研究结果表明,人为变量是所有火灾和大型火灾的重要预测因素,并且经常表现出非线性关系。然而,在大多数生态区,植被、气候和地形也是重要的变量。如果最近的住房增长趋势和火灾发生模式持续下去,这些地区将继续对寻求平衡野火风险与火灾生态效益的政策和管理工作构成挑战。