Parks Sean A, Holsinger Lisa M, Miller Carol, Nelson Cara R
Ecol Appl. 2015 Sep;25(6):1478-92. doi: 10.1890/14-1430.1.
Theory suggests that natural fire regimes can result in landscapes that are both self-regulating and resilient to fire. For example, because fires consume fuel, they may create barriers to the spread of future fires, thereby regulating fire size. Top-down controls such as weather, however, can weaken this effect. While empirical examples demonstrating this pattern-process feedback between vegetation and fire exist, they have been geographically limited or did not consider the influence of time between fires and weather. The availability of remotely sensed data identifying fire activity over the last four decades provides an opportunity to explicitly quantify-the ability of wildland fire to limit the progression of subsequent fire. Furthermore, advances in fire progression mapping now allow an evaluation of how daily weather as a top-down control modifies this effect. In this study, we evaluated the ability of wildland fire to create barriers that limit the spread of subsequent fire along a gradient representing time between fires in four large study areas in the western United States. Using fire progression maps in conjunction with weather station data, we also evaluated the influence of daily weather. Results indicate that wildland fire does limit subsequent fire spread in all four study areas, but this effect decays over time; wildland fire no longer limits subsequent fire spread 6-18 years after fire, depending on the study area. We also found that the ability of fire to regulate, subsequent fire progression was substantially reduced under extreme conditions compared to moderate weather conditions in all four study areas. This study increases understanding of the spatial feedbacks that can lead to self-regulating landscapes as well as the effects of top-down controls, such as weather, on these feedbacks. Our results will be useful to managers who seek to restore natural fire regimes or to exploit recent burns when managing fire.
理论表明,自然火灾模式可形成具有自我调节能力且对火灾具有恢复力的景观。例如,由于火灾会消耗燃料,它们可能会为未来火灾的蔓延设置障碍,从而控制火灾规模。然而,诸如天气等自上而下的控制因素会削弱这种效果。虽然存在一些实证例子证明植被与火灾之间存在这种模式 - 过程反馈,但它们在地理上存在局限性,或者没有考虑火灾间隔时间和天气的影响。过去四十年来可获取的识别火灾活动的遥感数据,为明确量化野火限制后续火灾蔓延的能力提供了契机。此外,火灾蔓延制图技术的进步现在使得能够评估作为自上而下控制因素的每日天气如何改变这种效果。在本研究中,我们评估了在美国西部四个大型研究区域中,野火沿着代表火灾间隔时间的梯度形成限制后续火灾蔓延障碍的能力。结合火灾蔓延地图和气象站数据,我们还评估了每日天气的影响。结果表明,野火确实在所有四个研究区域限制了后续火灾的蔓延,但这种效果会随着时间衰减;根据研究区域不同,野火在火灾发生6 - 18年后不再限制后续火灾的蔓延。我们还发现,在所有四个研究区域中,与适度天气条件相比,在极端条件下火灾调节后续火灾蔓延的能力大幅降低。这项研究增进了我们对可导致自我调节景观的空间反馈以及诸如天气等自上而下控制因素对这些反馈影响的理解。我们的结果将对那些寻求恢复自然火灾模式或在管理火灾时利用近期火灾的管理人员有用。