Pyrogeography of the Southeast USA: Exploring the Relationships between Wildfire and Climate

Wildfire plays a contradictory role as both a hazard and a necessary ecological process in certain ecosystems. A variety of factors influence wildfire, including fuel type and quantity, land management policies, and patterns of human activity. Climate, however, can often play a dominant role. Wildfi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Labosier, Christopher
Other Authors: Quiring, Steven, Lafon, Charles, Frauenfeld, Oliver, Rogers, William
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/153461
id fttexasamuniv:oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/153461
record_format openpolar
spelling fttexasamuniv:oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/153461 2023-05-15T17:36:42+02:00 Pyrogeography of the Southeast USA: Exploring the Relationships between Wildfire and Climate Labosier, Christopher Quiring, Steven Lafon, Charles Frauenfeld, Oliver Rogers, William 2015-02-05T17:26:44Z application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/153461 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/153461 synoptic climatology fire climatology Thesis text 2015 fttexasamuniv 2015-02-07T23:24:49Z Wildfire plays a contradictory role as both a hazard and a necessary ecological process in certain ecosystems. A variety of factors influence wildfire, including fuel type and quantity, land management policies, and patterns of human activity. Climate, however, can often play a dominant role. Wildfires are often thought to occur only in the western United States; however, fires are common on the southeastern U.S. landscape. Despite the abundance of fires, limited fire climatology work has been performed in this region. This dissertation addresses a knowledge gap in Southeast fire climatology by examining how gradients in precipitation regimes, in particular precipitation variability, influence spatial patterns of wildfire. In addition, modern synoptic climatology techniques are used to examine the relationships between atmospheric circulation patterns and wildfire ignitions in the central Gulf Coast sub-region of the Southeast. Chapter II characterizes precipitation regimes in Southeast national forests and associates mean annual ignition density and mean annual area burned with various precipitation metrics. Weak positive correlations were observed between daily precipitation variability and mean annual ignition density. Chapter III employs the Spatial Synoptic Classification (SSC) scheme to examine weather types associated with wildfire ignitions in the central Gulf Coast. Results show that dry tropical (DT) days occurred more often during years with higher numbers of ignitions in central Gulf Coast national forests, as well as in the 180, 90, and 30-day periods prior to a fire. DT weather types occurred most commonly in the fall and spring corresponding with peak fire seasons in much of the region. Particularly in the spring, DT variability was influenced by positive phases of the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), presumably increasing westerly flow and driving DT weather types farther east from their general source region. Finally, chapter IV developed eleven synoptic types using the Synoptic Typer Tool (STT). Principal Component Analysis (PCA) was applied to daily (18z) 500 mb geopotential height grids. Synoptic types were then linked with wildfire ignitions in the central Gulf Coast. Results suggested that troughs were associated with wildfire activity, as well as zonal flow and high pressure systems. Thesis North Atlantic North Atlantic oscillation Texas A&M University Digital Repository
institution Open Polar
collection Texas A&M University Digital Repository
op_collection_id fttexasamuniv
language English
topic synoptic climatology
fire climatology
spellingShingle synoptic climatology
fire climatology
Labosier, Christopher
Pyrogeography of the Southeast USA: Exploring the Relationships between Wildfire and Climate
topic_facet synoptic climatology
fire climatology
description Wildfire plays a contradictory role as both a hazard and a necessary ecological process in certain ecosystems. A variety of factors influence wildfire, including fuel type and quantity, land management policies, and patterns of human activity. Climate, however, can often play a dominant role. Wildfires are often thought to occur only in the western United States; however, fires are common on the southeastern U.S. landscape. Despite the abundance of fires, limited fire climatology work has been performed in this region. This dissertation addresses a knowledge gap in Southeast fire climatology by examining how gradients in precipitation regimes, in particular precipitation variability, influence spatial patterns of wildfire. In addition, modern synoptic climatology techniques are used to examine the relationships between atmospheric circulation patterns and wildfire ignitions in the central Gulf Coast sub-region of the Southeast. Chapter II characterizes precipitation regimes in Southeast national forests and associates mean annual ignition density and mean annual area burned with various precipitation metrics. Weak positive correlations were observed between daily precipitation variability and mean annual ignition density. Chapter III employs the Spatial Synoptic Classification (SSC) scheme to examine weather types associated with wildfire ignitions in the central Gulf Coast. Results show that dry tropical (DT) days occurred more often during years with higher numbers of ignitions in central Gulf Coast national forests, as well as in the 180, 90, and 30-day periods prior to a fire. DT weather types occurred most commonly in the fall and spring corresponding with peak fire seasons in much of the region. Particularly in the spring, DT variability was influenced by positive phases of the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), presumably increasing westerly flow and driving DT weather types farther east from their general source region. Finally, chapter IV developed eleven synoptic types using the Synoptic Typer Tool (STT). Principal Component Analysis (PCA) was applied to daily (18z) 500 mb geopotential height grids. Synoptic types were then linked with wildfire ignitions in the central Gulf Coast. Results suggested that troughs were associated with wildfire activity, as well as zonal flow and high pressure systems.
author2 Quiring, Steven
Lafon, Charles
Frauenfeld, Oliver
Rogers, William
format Thesis
author Labosier, Christopher
author_facet Labosier, Christopher
author_sort Labosier, Christopher
title Pyrogeography of the Southeast USA: Exploring the Relationships between Wildfire and Climate
title_short Pyrogeography of the Southeast USA: Exploring the Relationships between Wildfire and Climate
title_full Pyrogeography of the Southeast USA: Exploring the Relationships between Wildfire and Climate
title_fullStr Pyrogeography of the Southeast USA: Exploring the Relationships between Wildfire and Climate
title_full_unstemmed Pyrogeography of the Southeast USA: Exploring the Relationships between Wildfire and Climate
title_sort pyrogeography of the southeast usa: exploring the relationships between wildfire and climate
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/153461
genre North Atlantic
North Atlantic oscillation
genre_facet North Atlantic
North Atlantic oscillation
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/153461
_version_ 1766136262076399616