Classification of Fire Damage to Boreal Forests of Siberia in 2021 Based on the dNBR Index

Wildfire in Siberia is extensive, affecting up to 15 Mha annually. The proportion of the vegetation affected by severe fires is yet unknown, and it is a problem that requires a solution because post-fire mortality of tree stands in Siberian taiga has a strong effect on the global budget of carbon. T...

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Published in:Fire
Main Authors: Evgenii Ponomarev, Andrey Zabrodin, Tatiana Ponomareva
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/fire5010019
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author Evgenii Ponomarev
Andrey Zabrodin
Tatiana Ponomareva
author_facet Evgenii Ponomarev
Andrey Zabrodin
Tatiana Ponomareva
author_sort Evgenii Ponomarev
collection MDPI Open Access Publishing
container_issue 1
container_start_page 19
container_title Fire
container_volume 5
description Wildfire in Siberia is extensive, affecting up to 15 Mha annually. The proportion of the vegetation affected by severe fires is yet unknown, and it is a problem that requires a solution because post-fire mortality of tree stands in Siberian taiga has a strong effect on the global budget of carbon. The impact of fire in our area of interest in eastern Siberia was analyzed using the normalized burn ratio (NBR) and its pre- versus post-fire difference (dNBR) applied to Landsat-8 (OLI) collected in 2020–2021. In this paper, we present the classification of fire impact in relation to dominant tree stands and vegetation types in boreal forests of eastern Siberia. The dNBR of post-fire plots ranged widely (0.30–0.60) in homogeneous larch (Larix sibirica, L. gmelinii) forests, pine (Pinus sylvestris) forests, dark coniferous stands (Pinus sibirica, Abies sibirica, Picea obovata), sparse larch stands, and Siberian dwarf pine (Pinus pumila) stands. We quantified the proportions of low, moderate, and high fire severity (37%, 39%, and 24% of the total area burned, respectively) in dense tree stands, which were varied to 30%, 57%, and 13%, respectively, for sparse stands and tundra vegetation dominated in the north of eastern Siberia. The proportion of severe fires varied according to the transition from dominant larch stands (33.2% of the area burned) to pine (12.6%) and dark coniferous (up to 26.4%). The current proportion of stand-replacement fires in eastern Siberia is 12–33%, depending on vegetation type and tree density, which is about 2500 thousand hectares in 2021 in the region. According to our findings, the “healthy/unburned vegetation” class was quantified as well at least 700 thousand hectares in 2021.
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spelling ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/2571-6255/5/1/19/ 2025-01-17T01:04:06+00:00 Classification of Fire Damage to Boreal Forests of Siberia in 2021 Based on the dNBR Index Evgenii Ponomarev Andrey Zabrodin Tatiana Ponomareva agris 2022-01-29 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/fire5010019 EN eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/fire5010019 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Fire; Volume 5; Issue 1; Pages: 19 boreal forest wildfires dominant tree species normalized burn ratio fire impact classification fire severity stand-replacement fires Text 2022 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/fire5010019 2023-08-01T04:00:20Z Wildfire in Siberia is extensive, affecting up to 15 Mha annually. The proportion of the vegetation affected by severe fires is yet unknown, and it is a problem that requires a solution because post-fire mortality of tree stands in Siberian taiga has a strong effect on the global budget of carbon. The impact of fire in our area of interest in eastern Siberia was analyzed using the normalized burn ratio (NBR) and its pre- versus post-fire difference (dNBR) applied to Landsat-8 (OLI) collected in 2020–2021. In this paper, we present the classification of fire impact in relation to dominant tree stands and vegetation types in boreal forests of eastern Siberia. The dNBR of post-fire plots ranged widely (0.30–0.60) in homogeneous larch (Larix sibirica, L. gmelinii) forests, pine (Pinus sylvestris) forests, dark coniferous stands (Pinus sibirica, Abies sibirica, Picea obovata), sparse larch stands, and Siberian dwarf pine (Pinus pumila) stands. We quantified the proportions of low, moderate, and high fire severity (37%, 39%, and 24% of the total area burned, respectively) in dense tree stands, which were varied to 30%, 57%, and 13%, respectively, for sparse stands and tundra vegetation dominated in the north of eastern Siberia. The proportion of severe fires varied according to the transition from dominant larch stands (33.2% of the area burned) to pine (12.6%) and dark coniferous (up to 26.4%). The current proportion of stand-replacement fires in eastern Siberia is 12–33%, depending on vegetation type and tree density, which is about 2500 thousand hectares in 2021 in the region. According to our findings, the “healthy/unburned vegetation” class was quantified as well at least 700 thousand hectares in 2021. Text taiga Tundra Siberia MDPI Open Access Publishing Fire 5 1 19
spellingShingle boreal forest
wildfires
dominant tree species
normalized burn ratio
fire impact classification
fire severity
stand-replacement fires
Evgenii Ponomarev
Andrey Zabrodin
Tatiana Ponomareva
Classification of Fire Damage to Boreal Forests of Siberia in 2021 Based on the dNBR Index
title Classification of Fire Damage to Boreal Forests of Siberia in 2021 Based on the dNBR Index
title_full Classification of Fire Damage to Boreal Forests of Siberia in 2021 Based on the dNBR Index
title_fullStr Classification of Fire Damage to Boreal Forests of Siberia in 2021 Based on the dNBR Index
title_full_unstemmed Classification of Fire Damage to Boreal Forests of Siberia in 2021 Based on the dNBR Index
title_short Classification of Fire Damage to Boreal Forests of Siberia in 2021 Based on the dNBR Index
title_sort classification of fire damage to boreal forests of siberia in 2021 based on the dnbr index
topic boreal forest
wildfires
dominant tree species
normalized burn ratio
fire impact classification
fire severity
stand-replacement fires
topic_facet boreal forest
wildfires
dominant tree species
normalized burn ratio
fire impact classification
fire severity
stand-replacement fires
url https://doi.org/10.3390/fire5010019