Roos Christopher I, Kaib J Mark, Laluk Nicholas C, Adams Melinda M, Guiterman Christopher H, Baisan Christopher H, Morino Kiyomi, Swetnam Thomas W
Department of Anthropology, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, TX 75205.
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Albuquerque, NM 87109.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2025 Aug 12;122(32):e2509169122. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2509169122. Epub 2025 Aug 4.
Identifying the influence of low-density Indigenous populations in paleofire records has been methodologically challenging. In the Southwest United States, well-replicated fire histories suggest that abundant lightning and suitable climate conditions drove frequent low-severity wildfires in dry pine forests independent of human activities even as ethnography provided hints that highly mobile indigenous populations used fire in myriad land use contexts. Here, we leverage published and unpublished tree-ring fire history records from pine forests in Western Apache (Ndee) traditional territory in central and eastern Arizona (N = 34 sites, N = 649 trees) to demonstrate that historical fire regimes were overwhelmingly influenced by Ndee cultural burning. Our tree-ring synthesis shows significantly more frequent fires in Ndee territory than elsewhere in the region for centuries before the establishment of reservations (1600-1870 CE). Despite the heightened fire activity, fires were largely small and asynchronous, occurred disproportionately in late April and May, when Ndee invested significant subsistence activities in these pine forests, and occurred independent of climate drivers. This suggests that Ndee fire stewardship created a patchwork of nearly annual small, spring fires that inhibited natural fire spread and limited the influence of drought on fire activity. Our work shows that even relatively small, highly mobile populations of forager-gardeners had significant influence on some pre-Euroamerican fire regimes despite abundant natural ignitions. Our study shows clearly that Indigenous fire management impacted fire-size distributions, fire frequencies, and fire seasonality in ways that cannot be explained by seasonal and annual lightning densities.
确定低密度原住民群体对古火灾记录的影响在方法上具有挑战性。在美国西南部,大量重复的火灾历史表明,即使人种志显示高度流动的原住民群体在多种土地利用环境中使用火,但丰富的雷电和适宜的气候条件促使干旱松林中频繁发生低强度野火,且与人类活动无关。在此,我们利用来自亚利桑那州中部和东部西阿帕奇(恩迪)传统领地松树林已发表和未发表的树木年轮火灾历史记录(N = 34个地点,N = 649棵树),以证明历史火灾状况在很大程度上受到恩迪文化用火的影响。我们的树木年轮综合分析表明,在保留地建立之前的几个世纪(公元1600 - 1870年),恩迪领地的火灾频率明显高于该地区其他地方。尽管火灾活动增加,但火灾大多规模小且不同步,不成比例地发生在四月下旬和五月,此时恩迪在这些松树林中投入了大量维持生计的活动,并且火灾发生与气候驱动因素无关。这表明恩迪的火灾管理创造了一个几乎每年都有小规模春季火灾的拼凑格局,抑制了自然火灾的蔓延,并限制了干旱对火灾活动的影响。我们的研究表明,即使是相对较小、高度流动的觅食 - 园艺人群体,尽管有大量自然火源,对一些欧美前的火灾状况也有重大影响。我们的研究清楚地表明,原住民的火灾管理对火灾规模分布、火灾频率和火灾季节性产生了无法用季节性和年度雷电密度来解释的影响。