Department of Forest Ecosystems and Society, College of Forestry, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, 97331, USA.
Washington State Department of Natural Resources, Olympia, WA, 98504, USA.
Glob Chang Biol. 2021 Aug;27(15):3642-3656. doi: 10.1111/gcb.15655. Epub 2021 May 21.
Changing wildfire regimes are causing rapid shifts in forests worldwide. In particular, forested landscapes that burn repeatedly in relatively quick succession may be at risk of conversion when pre-fire vegetation cannot recover between fires. Fire refugia (areas that burn less frequently or severely than the surrounding landscape) support post-fire ecosystem recovery and the persistence of vulnerable species in fire-prone landscapes. Observed and projected fire-induced forest losses highlight the need to understand where and why forests persist in refugia through multiple fires. This research need is particularly acute in the Klamath-Siskiyou ecoregion of southwest Oregon and northwest California, USA, where expected increases in fire activity and climate warming may result in the loss of up to one-third of the region's conifer forests, which are the most diverse in western North America. Here, we leverage recent advances in fire progression mapping and weather interpolation, in conjunction with a novel application of satellite smoke imagery, to model the key controls on fire refugia occurrence and persistence through one, two, and three fire events over a 32-year period. Hotter-than-average fire weather was associated with lower refugia probability and higher fire severity. Refugia that persisted through three fire events appeared to be partially entrained by landscape features that offered protection from fire, suggesting that topographic variability may be an important stabilizing factor as forests pass through successive fire filters. In addition, smoke density strongly influenced fire effects, with fire refugia more likely to occur when smoke was moderate or dense in the morning, a relationship attributable to reduced incoming solar radiation resulting from smoke shading. Results from this study could inform management strategies designed to protect fire-resistant portions of biologically and topographically diverse landscapes.
野火发生频率的改变正在导致全球范围内森林的快速变化。特别是,在反复且快速发生火灾的森林景观中,若火灾前植被无法在两次火灾之间恢复,那么这些植被可能会有转变为其他类型的风险。火避难所(燃烧频率和严重程度低于周围景观的区域)支持火灾后生态系统的恢复和易受灾物种在火灾多发景观中的生存。已观测到和预计到的火灾引起的森林损失突出表明,需要了解森林在多次火灾中为何以及在何处能够得以幸存。在美国俄勒冈州西南部和加利福尼亚州西北部的克拉马斯-西斯基尤生态区,这种研究需求尤为迫切,因为预计那里的火灾活动增加和气候变暖可能导致该地区三分之一的针叶林丧失,而这些森林是北美西部最多样化的森林。在这里,我们利用最近在火灾蔓延图绘制和天气插值方面的进展,以及卫星烟雾图像的新应用,来模拟在 32 年的时间内通过一次、两次和三次火灾事件,对火避难所出现和持续存在的关键控制因素进行建模。异常炎热的火灾天气与较低的避难所概率和较高的火灾严重程度相关。在三次火灾事件中幸存下来的避难所似乎部分受到保护免受火灾的景观特征的控制,这表明地形变化可能是森林通过连续的火灾过滤器时的一个重要稳定因素。此外,烟雾密度强烈影响火灾效应,当清晨烟雾适中或密集时,火灾避难所更有可能出现,这种关系归因于烟雾遮挡导致的入射太阳辐射减少。本研究的结果可以为旨在保护具有生物和地形多样性的景观中防火部分的管理策略提供信息。