Department of Biostatistics, Columbia University, New York, NY, USA.
Graduate School of Business, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA.
Sci Adv. 2023 Nov 10;9(45):eadi4123. doi: 10.1126/sciadv.adi4123.
The increasing frequency of severe wildfires demands a shift in landscape management to mitigate their consequences. The role of managed, low-intensity fire as a driver of beneficial fuel treatment in fire-adapted ecosystems has drawn interest in both scientific and policy venues. Using a synthetic control approach to analyze 20 years of satellite-based fire activity data across 124,186 square kilometers of forests in California, we provide evidence that low-intensity fires substantially reduce the risk of future high-intensity fires. In conifer forests, the risk of high-intensity fire is reduced by 64.0% [95% confidence interval (CI): 41.2 to 77.9%] in areas recently burned at low intensity relative to comparable unburned areas, and protective effects last for at least 6 years (lower bound of one-sided 95% CI: 6 years). These findings support a policy transition from fire suppression to restoration, through increased use of prescribed fire, cultural burning, and managed wildfire, of a presuppression and precolonial fire regime in California.
野火日益频繁,要求转变景观管理方式以减轻其后果。在适应火灾的生态系统中,有控制的低强度火灾作为有益燃料处理的驱动因素,这在科学和政策领域都引起了关注。我们使用合成对照方法分析了加利福尼亚州 124186 平方公里森林 20 年的卫星火灾活动数据,为低强度火灾可显著降低未来高强度火灾风险提供了证据。在针叶林,与可比的未燃烧区域相比,最近低强度燃烧的区域高强度火灾的风险降低了 64.0%[95%置信区间(CI):41.2 至 77.9%],保护效应至少持续 6 年(单侧 95%CI 的下限:6 年)。这些发现支持了从火灾抑制到恢复的政策转变,即在加利福尼亚州增加使用规定火灾、文化燃烧和管理野火,以恢复抑制前和殖民前的火灾模式。