Image_1_Assessing the broadscale effects of wildfire under extreme drought conditions to boreal peatlands.TIF

Climate warming and changing fire regimes in the North American boreal zone have the capacity to alter the hydrology and ecology of the landscape with long term consequences to peatland ecosystems and their traditional role as carbon sinks. It is important to understand how peatlands are affected by...

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Main Authors: Laura L. Bourgeau-Chavez (11652415), Jeremy A. Graham (14280794), Dorthea J. L. Vander Bilt (14280797), Michael J. Battaglia (11652418)
Format: Still Image
Language:unknown
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3389/ffgc.2022.965605.s001
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spelling ftunivfreestate:oai:figshare.com:article/21754439 2023-05-15T17:46:48+02:00 Image_1_Assessing the broadscale effects of wildfire under extreme drought conditions to boreal peatlands.TIF Laura L. Bourgeau-Chavez (11652415) Jeremy A. Graham (14280794) Dorthea J. L. Vander Bilt (14280797) Michael J. Battaglia (11652418) 2022-12-20T04:07:14Z https://doi.org/10.3389/ffgc.2022.965605.s001 unknown https://figshare.com/articles/figure/Image_1_Assessing_the_broadscale_effects_of_wildfire_under_extreme_drought_conditions_to_boreal_peatlands_TIF/21754439 doi:10.3389/ffgc.2022.965605.s001 CC BY 4.0 CC-BY Agroforestry Forestry Biomass and Bioproducts Forestry Fire Management Forestry Management and Environment Forestry Pests Health and Diseases peatland wildfire drought boreal fire severity ecosystem vulnerability soil organic layer seasonality Image Figure 2022 ftunivfreestate https://doi.org/10.3389/ffgc.2022.965605.s001 2022-12-23T00:28:59Z Climate warming and changing fire regimes in the North American boreal zone have the capacity to alter the hydrology and ecology of the landscape with long term consequences to peatland ecosystems and their traditional role as carbon sinks. It is important to understand how peatlands are affected by wildfire in relation to both extent of burn and severity of burn to the organic soil (peat) layers where most of the C is stored. Peatlands cover more than 75% of the landscape in the southern Northwest Territories, Canada where extreme drought led to widespread wildfires in 2014–2015. To assess the wildfire effects across a 14.6 million ha study area including 136 wildfire events, we used an integration of field data collection, land cover mapping of peatland and upland ecotypes, Landsat-8-based mapping of burn severity to the soil organic layers, and MODIS-hotspot mapping of fire progression for season of burning. The intersection of these geospatial products allows for a broadscale assessment of wildfire effects across gradients of ecotype, ecoregions, seasons, and year of burn. Using a series of chi-squared goodness of fit tests, we found that peatlands are more susceptible to wildfire on the Taiga shield where they are smaller and hydrologically isolated by the rocky landscape. There burning affected proportionally larger peat areas with an evenness of burn severity to the organic soil layers which may lead to less spatial diversity in post-fire recovery, making the landscape less resilient to future fire. The most resilient peatlands are expected to be hydrologically well-connected to both ground water systems and larger peatland complexes such as those on the Taiga plains which exhibited large unburned and singed patches across the landscape, and greater variability in burn severity across seasons and ecotypes. Understanding the tipping point of drought conditions at which the landscape becomes connected, and peatlands are susceptible to wildfire with deeper burning of the organic soil layers is important for ... Still Image Northwest Territories taiga Taiga plains Taiga shield KovsieScholar Repository (University of the Free State - UFS UV) Canada Northwest Territories
institution Open Polar
collection KovsieScholar Repository (University of the Free State - UFS UV)
op_collection_id ftunivfreestate
language unknown
topic Agroforestry
Forestry Biomass and Bioproducts
Forestry Fire Management
Forestry Management and Environment
Forestry Pests
Health and Diseases
peatland
wildfire
drought
boreal
fire severity
ecosystem vulnerability
soil organic layer
seasonality
spellingShingle Agroforestry
Forestry Biomass and Bioproducts
Forestry Fire Management
Forestry Management and Environment
Forestry Pests
Health and Diseases
peatland
wildfire
drought
boreal
fire severity
ecosystem vulnerability
soil organic layer
seasonality
Laura L. Bourgeau-Chavez (11652415)
Jeremy A. Graham (14280794)
Dorthea J. L. Vander Bilt (14280797)
Michael J. Battaglia (11652418)
Image_1_Assessing the broadscale effects of wildfire under extreme drought conditions to boreal peatlands.TIF
topic_facet Agroforestry
Forestry Biomass and Bioproducts
Forestry Fire Management
Forestry Management and Environment
Forestry Pests
Health and Diseases
peatland
wildfire
drought
boreal
fire severity
ecosystem vulnerability
soil organic layer
seasonality
description Climate warming and changing fire regimes in the North American boreal zone have the capacity to alter the hydrology and ecology of the landscape with long term consequences to peatland ecosystems and their traditional role as carbon sinks. It is important to understand how peatlands are affected by wildfire in relation to both extent of burn and severity of burn to the organic soil (peat) layers where most of the C is stored. Peatlands cover more than 75% of the landscape in the southern Northwest Territories, Canada where extreme drought led to widespread wildfires in 2014–2015. To assess the wildfire effects across a 14.6 million ha study area including 136 wildfire events, we used an integration of field data collection, land cover mapping of peatland and upland ecotypes, Landsat-8-based mapping of burn severity to the soil organic layers, and MODIS-hotspot mapping of fire progression for season of burning. The intersection of these geospatial products allows for a broadscale assessment of wildfire effects across gradients of ecotype, ecoregions, seasons, and year of burn. Using a series of chi-squared goodness of fit tests, we found that peatlands are more susceptible to wildfire on the Taiga shield where they are smaller and hydrologically isolated by the rocky landscape. There burning affected proportionally larger peat areas with an evenness of burn severity to the organic soil layers which may lead to less spatial diversity in post-fire recovery, making the landscape less resilient to future fire. The most resilient peatlands are expected to be hydrologically well-connected to both ground water systems and larger peatland complexes such as those on the Taiga plains which exhibited large unburned and singed patches across the landscape, and greater variability in burn severity across seasons and ecotypes. Understanding the tipping point of drought conditions at which the landscape becomes connected, and peatlands are susceptible to wildfire with deeper burning of the organic soil layers is important for ...
format Still Image
author Laura L. Bourgeau-Chavez (11652415)
Jeremy A. Graham (14280794)
Dorthea J. L. Vander Bilt (14280797)
Michael J. Battaglia (11652418)
author_facet Laura L. Bourgeau-Chavez (11652415)
Jeremy A. Graham (14280794)
Dorthea J. L. Vander Bilt (14280797)
Michael J. Battaglia (11652418)
author_sort Laura L. Bourgeau-Chavez (11652415)
title Image_1_Assessing the broadscale effects of wildfire under extreme drought conditions to boreal peatlands.TIF
title_short Image_1_Assessing the broadscale effects of wildfire under extreme drought conditions to boreal peatlands.TIF
title_full Image_1_Assessing the broadscale effects of wildfire under extreme drought conditions to boreal peatlands.TIF
title_fullStr Image_1_Assessing the broadscale effects of wildfire under extreme drought conditions to boreal peatlands.TIF
title_full_unstemmed Image_1_Assessing the broadscale effects of wildfire under extreme drought conditions to boreal peatlands.TIF
title_sort image_1_assessing the broadscale effects of wildfire under extreme drought conditions to boreal peatlands.tif
publishDate 2022
url https://doi.org/10.3389/ffgc.2022.965605.s001
geographic Canada
Northwest Territories
geographic_facet Canada
Northwest Territories
genre Northwest Territories
taiga
Taiga plains
Taiga shield
genre_facet Northwest Territories
taiga
Taiga plains
Taiga shield
op_relation https://figshare.com/articles/figure/Image_1_Assessing_the_broadscale_effects_of_wildfire_under_extreme_drought_conditions_to_boreal_peatlands_TIF/21754439
doi:10.3389/ffgc.2022.965605.s001
op_rights CC BY 4.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3389/ffgc.2022.965605.s001
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