Sensitivity of Past, Present, and Future Fire Regimes to Climate and Vegetation Variability in Boreal Forest and Tundra Ecosystems

Wildfire activity in North American boreal forest and tundra ecosystems is strongly controlled by climate, indicating the potential for widespread fire-regime shifts in response to ongoing and future climate change. This dissertation focuses on understanding how fire regimes in boreal forest and tun...

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Main Author: Young, Adam Mason
Other Authors: Higuera, Philip Mason; Boschetti, Luigi Mason
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://digital.lib.uidaho.edu/cdm/ref/collection/etd/id/1364
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spelling ftunividahodc:oai:digital.lib.uidaho.edu:etd/1364 2023-11-12T04:13:49+01:00 Sensitivity of Past, Present, and Future Fire Regimes to Climate and Vegetation Variability in Boreal Forest and Tundra Ecosystems Young, Adam Mason Higuera, Philip Mason; Boschetti, Luigi Mason 2018-05 PDF http://digital.lib.uidaho.edu/cdm/ref/collection/etd/id/1364 en eng Young_idaho_0089E_11336 http://digital.lib.uidaho.edu/cdm/ref/collection/etd/id/1364 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/ Arctic Tundra Boreal Forests Climate Change Fire Ecology Statistical Modelling Ecology Text 2018 ftunividahodc 2023-10-27T10:31:12Z Wildfire activity in North American boreal forest and tundra ecosystems is strongly controlled by climate, indicating the potential for widespread fire-regime shifts in response to ongoing and future climate change. This dissertation focuses on understanding how fire regimes in boreal forest and tundra ecosystems respond to variability in past, present, and future climate. Chapter 1 addresses how climate, vegetation, and topography control the spatial distribution of fire occurrence in Alaskan boreal forest and tundra ecosystems. Through statistical modelling, I found that climate was the primary control of historical fire activity. Informing these statistical models with 21st-century climate projections suggests tundra and forest-tundra ecosystems will be particularly vulnerable to fire-regime shifts, due to increasing summer temperatures. In some areas, fire may become four times more likely to occur by 2100, relative to the past 6,000-35,000 years. In Chapter 2, I studied the importance of vegetation as a control of fire activity across North American boreal forests, using continental-scale fire and vegetation datasets spanning the past several decades. After climate, fire activity was most strongly linked to landscape tree cover (%). The likelihood of burning was also not independent of past fire, suggesting negative fire-vegetation feedbacks exist across North American boreal forests. These feedbacks are estimated to have reduced total area burned by ≈ 2.7-3.6 ×10^6 ha (4-5%) from 1981-2016, relative to expectations if there were no feedbacks. While these negative fire-vegetation feedbacks may offset climatically driven increases in fire activity for several decades, continued warming and increasing aridity will likely overwhelm the mediating effects of vegetation by the mid- to late-21st century. In Chapter 3, I evaluate the ability of the statistical models from Chapter 1 to project fire regimes outside of the observational period (i.e., 1950-2009 CE). I informed these models with GCM data from 850-1850 ... Text Arctic Climate change Tundra University of Idaho Library: Digital Initiatives
institution Open Polar
collection University of Idaho Library: Digital Initiatives
op_collection_id ftunividahodc
language English
topic Arctic Tundra
Boreal Forests
Climate Change
Fire Ecology
Statistical Modelling
Ecology
spellingShingle Arctic Tundra
Boreal Forests
Climate Change
Fire Ecology
Statistical Modelling
Ecology
Young, Adam Mason
Sensitivity of Past, Present, and Future Fire Regimes to Climate and Vegetation Variability in Boreal Forest and Tundra Ecosystems
topic_facet Arctic Tundra
Boreal Forests
Climate Change
Fire Ecology
Statistical Modelling
Ecology
description Wildfire activity in North American boreal forest and tundra ecosystems is strongly controlled by climate, indicating the potential for widespread fire-regime shifts in response to ongoing and future climate change. This dissertation focuses on understanding how fire regimes in boreal forest and tundra ecosystems respond to variability in past, present, and future climate. Chapter 1 addresses how climate, vegetation, and topography control the spatial distribution of fire occurrence in Alaskan boreal forest and tundra ecosystems. Through statistical modelling, I found that climate was the primary control of historical fire activity. Informing these statistical models with 21st-century climate projections suggests tundra and forest-tundra ecosystems will be particularly vulnerable to fire-regime shifts, due to increasing summer temperatures. In some areas, fire may become four times more likely to occur by 2100, relative to the past 6,000-35,000 years. In Chapter 2, I studied the importance of vegetation as a control of fire activity across North American boreal forests, using continental-scale fire and vegetation datasets spanning the past several decades. After climate, fire activity was most strongly linked to landscape tree cover (%). The likelihood of burning was also not independent of past fire, suggesting negative fire-vegetation feedbacks exist across North American boreal forests. These feedbacks are estimated to have reduced total area burned by ≈ 2.7-3.6 ×10^6 ha (4-5%) from 1981-2016, relative to expectations if there were no feedbacks. While these negative fire-vegetation feedbacks may offset climatically driven increases in fire activity for several decades, continued warming and increasing aridity will likely overwhelm the mediating effects of vegetation by the mid- to late-21st century. In Chapter 3, I evaluate the ability of the statistical models from Chapter 1 to project fire regimes outside of the observational period (i.e., 1950-2009 CE). I informed these models with GCM data from 850-1850 ...
author2 Higuera, Philip Mason; Boschetti, Luigi Mason
format Text
author Young, Adam Mason
author_facet Young, Adam Mason
author_sort Young, Adam Mason
title Sensitivity of Past, Present, and Future Fire Regimes to Climate and Vegetation Variability in Boreal Forest and Tundra Ecosystems
title_short Sensitivity of Past, Present, and Future Fire Regimes to Climate and Vegetation Variability in Boreal Forest and Tundra Ecosystems
title_full Sensitivity of Past, Present, and Future Fire Regimes to Climate and Vegetation Variability in Boreal Forest and Tundra Ecosystems
title_fullStr Sensitivity of Past, Present, and Future Fire Regimes to Climate and Vegetation Variability in Boreal Forest and Tundra Ecosystems
title_full_unstemmed Sensitivity of Past, Present, and Future Fire Regimes to Climate and Vegetation Variability in Boreal Forest and Tundra Ecosystems
title_sort sensitivity of past, present, and future fire regimes to climate and vegetation variability in boreal forest and tundra ecosystems
publishDate 2018
url http://digital.lib.uidaho.edu/cdm/ref/collection/etd/id/1364
genre Arctic
Climate change
Tundra
genre_facet Arctic
Climate change
Tundra
op_relation Young_idaho_0089E_11336
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op_rights http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
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