Conservation Biology Institute, Corvallis, OR 97333.
Instituto de Biología Subtropical, Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas - Universidad Nacional de Misiones, Puerto Iguazú, Misiones 3370, Argentina.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2024 Aug 6;121(32):e2310076121. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2310076121. Epub 2024 Jul 29.
An increasing amount of California's landscape has burned in wildfires in recent decades, in conjunction with increasing temperatures and vapor pressure deficit due to climate change. As the wildland-urban interface expands, more people are exposed to and harmed by these extensive wildfires, which are also eroding the resilience of terrestrial ecosystems. With future wildfire activity expected to increase, there is an urgent demand for solutions that sustain healthy ecosystems and wildfire-resilient human communities. Those who manage disaster response, landscapes, and biodiversity rely on mapped projections of how fire activity may respond to climate change and other human factors. California wildfire is complex, however, and climate-fire relationships vary across the state. Given known geographical variability in drivers of fire activity, we asked whether the geographical extent of fire models used to create these projections may alter the interpretation of predictions. We compared models of fire occurrence spanning the entire state of California to models developed for individual ecoregions and then projected end-of-century future fire patterns under climate change scenarios. We trained a Maximum Entropy model with fire records and hydroclimatological variables from recent decades (1981 to 2010) as well as topographic and human infrastructure predictors. Results showed substantial variation in predictors of fire probability and mapped future projections of fire depending upon geographical extents of model boundaries. Only the ecoregion models, accounting for the unique patterns of vegetation, climate, and human infrastructure, projected an increase in fire in most forested regions of the state, congruent with predictions from other studies.
近几十年来,由于气候变化导致气温和蒸气压亏缺增加,加利福尼亚州的景观中有越来越多的地方被野火烧毁。随着野地-城市交界地带的扩大,越来越多的人受到这些大面积野火的影响和伤害,这些野火也在侵蚀陆地生态系统的恢复力。由于未来的野火活动预计将会增加,因此迫切需要找到既能维持健康生态系统又能使人类社区具有抗野火能力的解决方案。那些管理灾害应对、景观和生物多样性的人依赖于对火灾活动如何应对气候变化和其他人为因素的映射预测。然而,加利福尼亚野火非常复杂,而且气候变化与火灾之间的关系在全州范围内各不相同。鉴于火灾活动的驱动因素存在已知的地理差异,我们想知道用于创建这些预测的火灾模型的地理范围是否会改变对预测的解释。我们将涵盖整个加利福尼亚州的火灾发生模型与针对各个生态区开发的模型进行了比较,然后根据气候变化情景预测了本世纪末的未来火灾模式。我们使用了来自最近几十年(1981 年至 2010 年)的火灾记录和水文气候变量以及地形和人类基础设施预测因子,对最大熵模型进行了训练。结果表明,火灾概率的预测因子和未来火灾的映射预测结果存在很大差异,这取决于模型边界的地理范围。只有那些生态区模型考虑到了植被、气候和人类基础设施的独特模式,才预测了该州大部分森林地区的火灾会增加,这与其他研究的预测结果一致。