Ecological Restoration Institute, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, Arizona, USA.
Fire Sciences Laboratory, Rocky Mountain Research Station, USDA Forest Service, Missoula, Montana, USA.
Glob Chang Biol. 2023 Dec;29(24):7029-7050. doi: 10.1111/gcb.16939. Epub 2023 Sep 14.
Climate warming, land use change, and altered fire regimes are driving ecological transformations that can have critical effects on Earth's biota. Fire refugia-locations that are burned less frequently or severely than their surroundings-may act as sites of relative stability during this period of rapid change by being resistant to fire and supporting post-fire recovery in adjacent areas. Because of their value to forest ecosystem persistence, there is an urgent need to anticipate where refugia are most likely to be found and where they align with environmental conditions that support post-fire tree recruitment. Using biophysical predictors and patterns of burn severity from 1180 recent fire events, we mapped the locations of potential fire refugia across upland conifer forests in the southwestern United States (US) (99,428 km of forest area), a region that is highly vulnerable to fire-driven transformation. We found that low pre-fire forest cover, flat slopes or topographic concavities, moderate weather conditions, spring-season burning, and areas affected by low- to moderate-severity fire within the previous 15 years were most commonly associated with refugia. Based on current (i.e., 2021) conditions, we predicted that 67.6% and 18.1% of conifer forests in our study area would contain refugia under moderate and extreme fire weather, respectively. However, potential refugia were 36.4% (moderate weather) and 31.2% (extreme weather) more common across forests that experienced recent fires, supporting the increased use of prescribed and resource objective fires during moderate weather conditions to promote fire-resistant landscapes. When overlaid with models of tree recruitment, 23.2% (moderate weather) and 6.4% (extreme weather) of forests were classified as refugia with a high potential to support post-fire recruitment in the surrounding landscape. These locations may be disproportionately valuable for ecosystem sustainability, providing habitat for fire-sensitive species and maintaining forest persistence in an increasingly fire-prone world.
气候变暖、土地利用变化和改变的火灾发生规律正在推动生态转型,这可能对地球生物群产生重大影响。火灾避难所——与周围环境相比,火灾发生频率较低或程度较轻的地方——在这个快速变化的时期,可能成为相对稳定的地点,因为它们能够抵御火灾,并支持相邻地区的火灾后恢复。由于它们对森林生态系统持续存在的价值,迫切需要预测避难所最有可能存在的地方,以及它们与支持火灾后树木繁殖的环境条件的一致性。我们利用生物物理预测因子和 1180 次近期火灾事件的燃烧严重程度模式,绘制了美国西南部高地针叶林(99428 平方公里的森林面积)潜在火灾避难所的位置图,该地区极易受到火灾驱动的变化。我们发现,低火灾前森林覆盖率、平坦的坡度或地形凹处、温和的天气条件、春季燃烧以及过去 15 年内受低至中度严重火灾影响的地区,与避难所最常相关。基于当前(即 2021 年)的条件,我们预测,在我们研究区域内的针叶林中,67.6%和 18.1%将分别在中度和极端火灾天气下包含避难所。然而,在最近发生火灾的森林中,潜在的避难所更常见,分别为 36.4%(中度天气)和 31.2%(极端天气),这支持了在中度天气条件下更多地使用规定性和资源目标火灾,以促进防火景观。当与树木繁殖模型叠加时,23.2%(中度天气)和 6.4%(极端天气)的森林被归类为避难所,这些避难所有很大潜力在周围景观中支持火灾后的繁殖。这些地点对于生态系统的可持续性可能具有不成比例的价值,为对火灾敏感的物种提供栖息地,并在一个越来越容易发生火灾的世界中维持森林的持续存在。