How Fire History, Fire Suppression Practices and Climate Change Affect Wildfire Regimes in Mediterranean Landscapes

被引:150
|
作者
Brotons, Lluis [1 ,2 ]
Aquilue, Nuria [1 ,2 ]
de Caceres, Miquel [1 ,2 ]
Fortin, Marie-Josee [3 ]
Fall, Andrew [4 ,5 ]
机构
[1] CTFC, Area Biodiversitat, Grp Ecol Paisatge, Solsona, Catalonia, Spain
[2] CREAF, Bellaterra, Spain
[3] Univ Toronto, Dept Ecol & Evolutionary Biol, Toronto, ON, Canada
[4] Simon Fraser Univ, Lasqueti, BC, Canada
[5] Gowlland Technol Ltd, Lasqueti, BC, Canada
来源
PLOS ONE | 2013年 / 8卷 / 05期
关键词
CATALONIA NE SPAIN; MANAGEMENT STRATEGIES; BOREAL FORESTS; WILDLAND FIRE; MODELS; DYNAMICS; FUELS; RISK; REEXAMINATION; ECOSYSTEMS;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pone.0062392
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Available data show that future changes in global change drivers may lead to an increasing impact of fires on terrestrial ecosystems worldwide. Yet, fire regime changes in highly humanised fire-prone regions are difficult to predict because fire effects may be heavily mediated by human activities We investigated the role of fire suppression strategies in synergy with climate change on the resulting fire regimes in Catalonia (north-eastern Spain). We used a spatially-explicit fire-succession model at the landscape level to test whether the use of different firefighting opportunities related to observed reductions in fire spread rates and effective fire sizes, and hence changes in the fire regime. We calibrated this model with data from a period with weak firefighting and later assess the potential for suppression strategies to modify fire regimes expected under different levels of climate change. When comparing simulations with observed fire statistics from an eleven-year period with firefighting strategies in place, our results showed that, at least in two of the three sub-regions analysed, the observed fire regime could not be reproduced unless taking into account the effects of fire suppression. Fire regime descriptors were highly dependent on climate change scenarios, with a general trend, under baseline scenarios without fire suppression, to large-scale increases in area burnt. Fire suppression strategies had a strong capacity to compensate for climate change effects. However, strong active fire suppression was necessary to accomplish such compensation, while more opportunistic fire suppression strategies derived from recent fire history only had a variable, but generally weak, potential for compensation of enhanced fire impacts under climate change. The concept of fire regime in the Mediterranean is probably better interpreted as a highly dynamic process in which the main determinants of fire are rapidly modified by changes in landscape, climate and socioeconomic factors such as fire suppression strategies.
引用
收藏
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Drought, Flood, Fire: How Climate Change Contributes to Catastrophes
    Howard, Katie
    WEATHER, 2022, 77 (05) : 191 - 191
  • [42] Climate change impacts on regional fire weather in heterogeneous landscapes of central Europe
    Miller, Julia
    Boehnisch, Andrea
    Ludwig, Ralf
    Brunner, Manuela I.
    NATURAL HAZARDS AND EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCES, 2024, 24 (02) : 411 - 428
  • [43] FIRE HISTORY AND CLIMATE-CHANGE IN GIANT SEQUOIA GROVES
    SWETNAM, TW
    SCIENCE, 1993, 262 (5135) : 885 - 889
  • [44] Fire regimes of the Southern Appalachians may radically shift under climate change
    Zachary J. Robbins
    E. Louise Loudermilk
    Tina G. Mozelewski
    Kate Jones
    Robert M. Scheller
    Fire Ecology, 20
  • [45] Indigenous brigades change the spatial patterns of wildfires, and the influence of climate on fire regimes
    Oliveira, Maxwell R.
    Ferreira, Bruno H. S.
    Souza, Evaldo B.
    Lopes, Aline A.
    Bolzan, Fabio P.
    Roque, Fabio O.
    Pott, Arnildo
    Pereira, Alexandre M. M.
    Garcia, Leticia C.
    Damasceno Jr, Geraldo A.
    Costa, Ademilson
    Rocha, Mesaque
    Xavier, Silvio
    Ferraz, Rubens A.
    Ribeiro, Danilo B.
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY, 2022, 59 (05) : 1279 - 1290
  • [46] Fire regimes of the Southern Appalachians may radically shift under climate change
    Robbins, Zachary J.
    Loudermilk, E. Louise
    Mozelewski, Tina G.
    Jones, Kate
    Scheller, Robert M.
    FIRE ECOLOGY, 2024, 20 (01)
  • [47] Fire-smart management of forest landscapes in the Mediterranean basin under global change
    Fernandes, Paulo M.
    LANDSCAPE AND URBAN PLANNING, 2013, 110 : 175 - 182
  • [48] Potential Effects of Climate Change on Fire Behavior, Economic Susceptibility and Suppression Costs in Mediterranean Ecosystems: Cordoba Province, Spain
    Molina, Juan Ramon
    Gonzalez-Caban, Armando
    Rodriguez y Silva, Francisco
    FORESTS, 2019, 10 (08):
  • [49] Perceptions of forest experts on climate change and fire management in European Mediterranean forests
    Raftoyannis, Yannis
    Nocentini, Susanna
    Marchi, Enrico
    Calama Sainz, Rafael
    Garcia Guemes, Carlos
    Pilas, Ivan
    Peric, Sanja
    Paulo, Joana Amaral
    Moreira-Marcelino, Ana Cristina
    Costa-Ferreira, Maria
    Kakouris, Erodotos
    Lindner, Marcus
    IFOREST-BIOGEOSCIENCES AND FORESTRY, 2013, 7 : 33 - 41
  • [50] Projection of Forest Fire Danger due to Climate Change in the French Mediterranean Region
    Varela, Vassiliki
    Vlachogiannis, Diamando
    Sfetsos, Athanasios
    Karozis, Stelios
    Politi, Nadia
    Giroud, Frederique
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2019, 11 (16)