Department of Plant Sciences, University of California, Davis, California, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2024 Oct;34(7):e3023. doi: 10.1002/eap.3023. Epub 2024 Aug 15.
Rising global fire activity is increasing the prevalence of repeated short-interval burning (reburning) in forests worldwide. In forests that historically experienced frequent-fire regimes, high-severity fire exacerbates the severity of subsequent fires by increasing prevalence of shrubs and/or by creating drier understory conditions. Low- to moderate-severity fire, in contrast, can moderate future fire behavior by reducing fuel loads. The extent to which previous fires moderate future fire severity will powerfully affect fire-prone forest ecosystem trajectories over the next century. Further, knowing where and when a wildfire may act as a landscape-scale fuel treatment can help direct pre- and post-fire management efforts. We leverage satellite imagery and fire progression mapping to model reburn dynamics within forests that initially burned at low/moderate severity in 726 unique fire pair events over a 36-year period across four large fire-prone Western US ecoregions. We ask (1) how strong are the moderating effects of low- to moderate-severity fire on future fire severity, (2) how long do moderating effects last, and (3) how does the time between fires (a proxy for fuel accumulation) interact with initial fire severity, day-of-burning weather conditions, and climate to influence reburn severity. Short-interval reburns primarily occurred in dry- and moist-mixed conifer forests with historically frequent-fire regimes. Previous fire moderated reburn severity in all ecoregions with the strongest effects occurring in the California Coast and Western Mountains and the average duration of moderating effects ranging from 13 years in the Western Mountains to >36 years in the California Coast. The strength and duration of moderating effects depended on climate and initial fire severity in some regions, reflecting differences in post-fire fuel accumulation. In the California Coast, moderating effects lasted longer in cooler and wetter forests. In the Western Mountains, moderating effects were stronger and longer lasting in forests that initially burned at higher severity. Moderating effects were largely robust to fire weather, suggesting that previous fire can mediate future fire severity even under extreme conditions. Our findings demonstrate that low- to moderate-severity fire buffers future fire severity in historically frequent-fire forests, underlining the importance of wildfire as a restoration tool for adapting to global change.
全球火灾活动的增加导致世界各地森林中反复发生短间隔燃烧(再燃)的情况越来越普遍。在历史上经常发生火灾的森林中,高强度火灾会通过增加灌木的发生率或创造更干燥的林下条件来加剧后续火灾的严重程度。相比之下,低强度到中等强度的火灾可以通过减少燃料负荷来缓和未来的火灾行为。过去火灾对未来火灾严重程度的缓和程度将强烈影响未来一个世纪内易发生火灾的森林生态系统轨迹。此外,了解野火何时何地可能成为景观尺度的燃料处理措施,有助于指导火灾前后的管理工作。我们利用卫星图像和火灾蔓延图,在过去 36 年的四个易发生火灾的美国西部生态区的 726 个独特火灾对中,对初始低/中度强度火灾后的再燃动态进行建模。我们提出了以下三个问题:(1)低强度到中等强度火灾对未来火灾严重程度的缓和作用有多强;(2)缓和作用持续多长时间;(3)火灾之间的时间间隔(燃料积累的代理)如何与初始火灾严重程度、燃烧日天气条件以及气候相互作用,从而影响再燃严重程度。短间隔再燃主要发生在历史上经常发生火灾的干燥和湿润混合针叶林。所有生态区的先前火灾都对再燃严重程度有缓和作用,其中加利福尼亚海岸和西部山脉的影响最大,平均缓和作用持续时间从西部山脉的 13 年到加利福尼亚海岸的>36 年不等。在一些地区,气候和初始火灾严重程度决定了缓和作用的强度和持续时间,反映了火灾后燃料积累的差异。在加利福尼亚海岸,凉爽和湿润的森林中缓和作用持续时间更长。在西部山脉,初始火灾严重程度较高的森林中,缓和作用更强,持续时间更长。在很大程度上,缓和作用对火灾天气具有鲁棒性,这表明即使在极端条件下,先前的火灾也可以缓和未来的火灾严重程度。我们的研究结果表明,在历史上经常发生火灾的森林中,低强度到中等强度的火灾缓冲了未来的火灾严重程度,这凸显了野火作为适应全球变化的恢复工具的重要性。