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Large
Forest
Fires Linked to Climate Change
by Mari N. Jensen, UA Communications
Large forest fires have
occurred more frequently in the western
United States
since the mid-1980s as spring temperatures increased, mountain snows melted
earlier and summers got hotter, according to new research.
Almost seven times more
forested federal land burned during the 1987-2003 period than during the prior
17 years. In addition, large fires occurred about four times more often during
the latter period.
The research is the most
systematic analysis to date of recent changes in forest fire activity in the
western
United States
. The increases in fire extent and frequency are strongly linked to higher
March-through-August temperatures and are most pronounced for mid-elevation
forests in the northern
Rocky Mountains
.
The new finding points to
climate change, not fire suppression policies and forest fuel accumulation, as
the primary driver of recent increases in large forest fires.
“I see this as one of the
first big indicators of climate change impacts in the continental
United States
,” said research team member Thomas W. Swetnam, director of the Laboratory of
Tree-Ring Research at The University of Arizona in
Tucson
. “We’re showing warming and earlier springs tying in with large forest fire
frequencies. Lots of people think climate change and the ecological responses
are 50 to 100 years away. But it’s not 50 to 100 years away — it’s
happening now in forest ecosystems through fire.”
The researchers found the
wildfire season now starts earlier, fires last longer and the fire season ends
later. “The length of the fire season has increased almost two-and-one-half
months compared with 1970 to 1986,” Swetnam said. “That’s a remarkable
thing in itself.”
In recent years, wildfires in
the western
United States
have burned hundreds of homes annually and caused extreme and sometimes
irreversible damage to natural resources. Fire-fighting expenditures for
wildfires now regularly exceed one billion dollars per year. The research report
was published in the July 6 issue of Science Express, the online version of the
journal Science.
Anthony L. Westerling,
formerly of Scripps Institution of Oceanography in
La Jolla
,
Calif.
, led the research team, which included Scripps scientists Hugo G. Hidalgo and
Daniel R. Cayan and UA’s Swetnam. Westerling is now at the
University
of
California
,
Merced
. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the U.S. Forest Service
and the California Energy Commission funded the research.
The fire management and
scientific communities have thought that
U.S.
forest fires have been increasing since the 1980s. Research to explain such
fires has focused on either climate or 19th-and-20th century land-use practices,
such as livestock grazing, logging and fire suppression.
To see what role climate might
play, the Scripps-led research team compared western U.S. fire history, the
timing of snowmelt, and spring and summer temperatures for the 34 years from
1970 to 2003. From wildfire data covering western U.S. Forest Service and
National Park Service lands, the researchers compiled a comprehensive time
series of 1,166 forest wildfires of at least 1,000 acres that had occurred
between 1970 and 2003.
To figure out the timing of
peak snowmelt in the mountains for each year, the researchers used the
streamflow gauge records from 240 stations throughout western
North America
. The team also used other climatic data including seasonal temperature
observations and moisture deficit, an indicator of dryness.
The researchers determined
that year-to-year changes in wildfire frequency appear to be strongly linked to
annual spring and summer temperatures and to the timing of spring snowmelt.
“At higher elevations what really drives the fire season is the temperature.
When you have a warm spring and early summer, you get rapid snowmelt,”
Westerling said. “With the snowmelt coming out a month earlier, areas get
drier overall. There is a longer season in which a fire can be started and more
opportunity for ignition.”
The researchers found that 56
percent of the wildfires and 72 percent of the total area burned occurred in
early snowmelt years. By contrast, years when snowmelt happened much later than
average had only 11 percent of the wildfires and 4 percent of the total area
burned. Climate model projections suggest warmer springs and summers are more
likely to occur in the West, amplifying the region’s vulnerability to
wildfires, the researchers note in their article.
The researchers suggest that
more severe fires could change forest composition so drastically that the
western forests, which currently store atmospheric carbon dioxide, could become
a source of atmospheric CO2. Additional carbon dioxide could further warm the
climate and exacerbate the fire problem.
Swetnam was initially
skeptical that climate was driving recent large-scale changes in fire frequency.
Doing this research changed his mind.
“I had thought it was
primarily fuel load. These results suggest that for most western
U.S.
forests, climate is a primary driver and fuel is secondary.” He added, “In
the Southwest we know we have a fuel problem. You lay on top of that warming
temperatures and now we have the worst of both situations — changed forests
and changed climate.”
Published
by: http://www.uagrad.org/Alumnus/gw/fire.html

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