Conservation Biology Institute, Corvallis, OR 97333;
US Geological Survey, Western Ecological Research Center, Sequoia-Kings Canyon Field Station, Three Rivers, CA 93271.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2017 Dec 26;114(52):13750-13755. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1713885114. Epub 2017 Dec 11.
Growing human and ecological costs due to increasing wildfire are an urgent concern in policy and management, particularly given projections of worsening fire conditions under climate change. Thus, understanding the relationship between climatic variation and fire activity is a critically important scientific question. Different factors limit fire behavior in different places and times, but most fire-climate analyses are conducted across broad spatial extents that mask geographical variation. This could result in overly broad or inappropriate management and policy decisions that neglect to account for regionally specific or other important factors driving fire activity. We developed statistical models relating seasonal temperature and precipitation variables to historical annual fire activity for 37 different regions across the continental United States and asked whether and how fire-climate relationships vary geographically, and why climate is more important in some regions than in others. Climatic variation played a significant role in explaining annual fire activity in some regions, but the relative importance of seasonal temperature or precipitation, in addition to the overall importance of climate, varied substantially depending on geographical context. Human presence was the primary reason that climate explained less fire activity in some regions than in others. That is, where human presence was more prominent, climate was less important. This means that humans may not only influence fire regimes but their presence can actually override, or swamp out, the effect of climate. Thus, geographical context as well as human influence should be considered alongside climate in national wildfire policy and management.
由于野火导致的人类和生态成本不断增加,这是政策和管理方面的一个紧迫问题,特别是考虑到气候变化下火灾情况预计会恶化。因此,了解气候变化与火灾活动之间的关系是一个至关重要的科学问题。不同的因素在不同的地点和时间限制火灾行为,但大多数火灾气候分析都是在广泛的空间范围内进行的,这掩盖了地理变化。这可能导致过于广泛或不适当的管理和政策决策,而这些决策没有考虑到驱动火灾活动的区域特定或其他重要因素。我们为美国大陆的 37 个不同地区开发了与季节性温度和降水变量相关的统计模型,以了解火灾气候关系在地理上是否以及如何变化,以及为什么气候在某些地区比其他地区更为重要。气候变化在一些地区解释年度火灾活动方面发挥了重要作用,但季节性温度或降水的相对重要性(以及气候的总体重要性)在很大程度上取决于地理背景。人类的存在是气候在某些地区解释的火灾活动较少的主要原因,也就是说,在人类存在更为突出的地区,气候的重要性较低。这意味着人类不仅可能影响火灾制度,而且他们的存在实际上可能会超过或淹没气候的影响。因此,在国家野火政策和管理中,除了气候因素外,还应考虑地理背景和人类的影响。