Crist Michele R
Landscape Ecologist, U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management, Fire and Aviation Directorate, Boise, ID, 83705, USA.
J Environ Manage. 2023 Feb 1;327:116718. doi: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.116718. Epub 2022 Dec 22.
For most of the 20th century and beyond, national wildland fire policies concerning fire suppression and fuels management have primarily focused on forested lands. Using summary statistics and landscape metrics, wildfire spatial patterns and trends for non-forest and forest burned area over the past two decades were examined across the U.S, and federal agency jurisdictions. This study found that wildfires burned more area of non-forest lands than forest lands at the scale of the conterminous and western U.S. and the Department of Interior (DOI). In an agency comparison, 74% of DOI burned area occurred on non-forest lands and 78% of U.S. Forest Service burned area occurred on forested lands. Landscape metrics revealed key differences between forest and non-forest fire patterns and trends in total burned area, burned patch size, distribution, and aggregation over time across the western U.S. Opposite fire patterns emerged between non-forest and forest burns when analyzed at the scale of federal agency jurisdictions. In addition, a fire regime departure analysis comparing current large fire probability with historic fire trends identified certain vegetation types and locations experiencing more fire than historically. These patterns were especially pronounced for cold desert shrublands, such as sagebrush where increases in annual area burned, and fire frequency, size, and juxtaposition have resulted in substantial losses over a twenty-year period. The emerging non-forest fire patterns are primarily due to the rapid expansion of non-native invasive grasses that increase fuel connectivity and fire spread. These invasions promote uncharacteristic frequent fire and loss of native ecosystems at large-scales, accelerating the need to place greater focus on managing invasive species in wildland fire management. Results can be used to inform wildfire management and policy aimed at reducing uncharacteristic wildfire processes and patterns for both non-forest and forest ecosystems as well as identify differing management strategies needed to address the unique wildfire issues each federal agency faces.
在20世纪的大部分时间及以后,国家关于野火扑救和燃料管理的荒地火灾政策主要集中在森林地区。利用汇总统计数据和景观指标,对美国本土、西部地区以及联邦机构管辖范围内过去二十年非森林和森林燃烧面积的野火空间格局和趋势进行了研究。这项研究发现,在美国本土、西部地区以及内政部(DOI)范围内,野火燃烧的非森林土地面积比森林土地面积更大。在各机构的对比中,内政部燃烧面积的74%发生在非森林土地上,而美国林业局燃烧面积的78%发生在森林土地上。景观指标揭示了美国西部森林和非森林火灾模式及总燃烧面积、燃烧斑块大小、分布和随时间的聚集情况之间的关键差异。在联邦机构管辖范围内进行分析时,非森林和森林火灾呈现出相反的模式。此外,一项将当前大型火灾概率与历史火灾趋势进行比较的火灾状况偏离分析确定了某些植被类型和地点的火灾比历史上更多。这些模式在寒冷沙漠灌木丛地区尤为明显,比如鼠尾草地区,在二十年时间里,年燃烧面积、火灾频率、规模和并置情况的增加导致了大量损失。新出现的非森林火灾模式主要是由于非本地入侵草类的迅速扩张,这增加了燃料的连通性和火灾蔓延。这些入侵促使大规模出现异常频繁的火灾和本地生态系统的丧失,加速了在荒地火灾管理中更加重视管理入侵物种的必要性。研究结果可用于为旨在减少非森林和森林生态系统异常野火过程和模式的野火管理及政策提供信息,同时确定应对每个联邦机构面临的独特野火问题所需的不同管理策略。