Abatzoglou John T, Kolden Crystal A, Cullen Alison C, Sadegh Mojtaba, Williams Emily L, Turco Marco, Jones Matthew W
School of Engineering, University of California, Merced, CA, USA.
Evans School of Public Policy and Governance, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
Nat Commun. 2025 Jul 10;16(1):6390. doi: 10.1038/s41467-025-61608-1.
Regions across the globe have experienced devastating fire years in the past decade with far-reaching impacts. Here, we examine the role of antecedent and concurrent climate variability in enabling extreme regional fire years across global forests. These extreme years commonly coincided with extreme (1-in-15-year) fire weather indices (FWI) and featured a four and five-fold increase in the number of large fires and fire carbon emissions, respectively, compared with non-extreme years. Years with such extreme FWI metrics are 88-152% more likely across global forested lands under a contemporary (2011-2040) climate compared to a quasi-preindustrial (1851-1900) climate, with the most pronounced increased risk in temperate and Amazonian forests. Our results show that human-caused climate change is raising the odds of extreme climate-driven fire years across forested regions of the globe, necessitating proactive measures to mitigate risks and adapt to extreme fire years.
在过去十年中,全球各地都经历了具有深远影响的毁灭性火灾年份。在此,我们研究前期和同期气候变率在促成全球森林极端区域火灾年份方面所起的作用。这些极端年份通常与极端(15年一遇)火灾天气指数(FWI)同时出现,与非极端年份相比,大型火灾数量和火灾碳排放分别增加了四倍和五倍。与准工业化时期(1851 - 1900年)的气候相比,在当代(2011 - 2040年)气候条件下,全球森林地区出现此类极端FWI指标的年份可能性要高出88% - 152%,其中温带和亚马逊森林地区风险增加最为显著。我们的研究结果表明,人为引起的气候变化正在增加全球森林地区因极端气候引发火灾年份的可能性,因此有必要采取积极措施来降低风险并适应极端火灾年份。