Topography, Climate And Fire History Regulate Wildfire Activity In The Alaskan Tundra

Although the link between climate change and tundra fire activity is well-studied, we lack an understanding of how fire, vegetation, and topography interact to either amplify or dampen climatic effects on these tundra fires at Pan-Arctic scale. This study investigated the relative influence of fire...

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Published in:Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences
Main Authors: Masrur, Arif, Taylor, Alan, Harris, Lucas, Barnes, Jennifer, Petrov, Andrey
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: UNI ScholarWorks 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.uni.edu/facpub/5229
https://doi.org/10.1029/2021JG006608
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spelling ftunortherniowa:oai:scholarworks.uni.edu:facpub-6230 2023-11-12T04:12:47+01:00 Topography, Climate And Fire History Regulate Wildfire Activity In The Alaskan Tundra Masrur, Arif Taylor, Alan Harris, Lucas Barnes, Jennifer Petrov, Andrey 2022-03-01T08:00:00Z https://scholarworks.uni.edu/facpub/5229 https://doi.org/10.1029/2021JG006608 unknown UNI ScholarWorks https://scholarworks.uni.edu/facpub/5229 doi:10.1029/2021JG006608 https://doi.org/10.1029/2021JG006608 Faculty Publications climate change fire history fire regime change topography tundra fire text 2022 ftunortherniowa https://doi.org/10.1029/2021JG006608 2023-10-28T22:46:08Z Although the link between climate change and tundra fire activity is well-studied, we lack an understanding of how fire, vegetation, and topography interact to either amplify or dampen climatic effects on these tundra fires at Pan-Arctic scale. This study investigated the relative influence of fire history, climate, topography and vegetation on fire occurrence and size in Alaskan tundra (1981–2019) and the potential for self-reinforcing/limiting fire behavior. Regime shift analysis identified a step increase in fire frequency after 2010 with increased average annual area burned (+96%) and area reburned (+61%) over the 2010–2019 period, consistent with climatic thresholds in fire activity being crossed. Correlation analysis shows variation in fire frequency was positively and significantly related to mean summer temperatures. The competing roles of fire history and bio-climate were investigated via random forest models using (a) environmental conditions and (b) environmental conditions and fire history. Fire occurrence was primarily driven by topographic complexity and elevation, suggesting that areas at 50–200 m elevation with gently rolling terrain such as the Arctic Foothills of the Brooks Range or the Kotzebue Lowlands in northern Alaska will likely become hotspots of fire activity. In contrast, fire size was affected mainly by fire history and winter-spring climate, which demonstrates the importance of both fuel limitations and self-reinforcing (e.g., rapid fuel regrowth following smaller-sized fires) fire-vegetation interactions in regulating tundra fire activity. Future modeling studies need more nuanced representations of fire-terrain and fire-vegetation interactions to accurately project how tundra ecosystems may respond to climatic warming. Text Arctic Brooks Range Climate change Tundra Alaska University of Northern Iowa: UNI ScholarWorks Arctic Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences 127 3
institution Open Polar
collection University of Northern Iowa: UNI ScholarWorks
op_collection_id ftunortherniowa
language unknown
topic climate change
fire history
fire regime change
topography
tundra fire
spellingShingle climate change
fire history
fire regime change
topography
tundra fire
Masrur, Arif
Taylor, Alan
Harris, Lucas
Barnes, Jennifer
Petrov, Andrey
Topography, Climate And Fire History Regulate Wildfire Activity In The Alaskan Tundra
topic_facet climate change
fire history
fire regime change
topography
tundra fire
description Although the link between climate change and tundra fire activity is well-studied, we lack an understanding of how fire, vegetation, and topography interact to either amplify or dampen climatic effects on these tundra fires at Pan-Arctic scale. This study investigated the relative influence of fire history, climate, topography and vegetation on fire occurrence and size in Alaskan tundra (1981–2019) and the potential for self-reinforcing/limiting fire behavior. Regime shift analysis identified a step increase in fire frequency after 2010 with increased average annual area burned (+96%) and area reburned (+61%) over the 2010–2019 period, consistent with climatic thresholds in fire activity being crossed. Correlation analysis shows variation in fire frequency was positively and significantly related to mean summer temperatures. The competing roles of fire history and bio-climate were investigated via random forest models using (a) environmental conditions and (b) environmental conditions and fire history. Fire occurrence was primarily driven by topographic complexity and elevation, suggesting that areas at 50–200 m elevation with gently rolling terrain such as the Arctic Foothills of the Brooks Range or the Kotzebue Lowlands in northern Alaska will likely become hotspots of fire activity. In contrast, fire size was affected mainly by fire history and winter-spring climate, which demonstrates the importance of both fuel limitations and self-reinforcing (e.g., rapid fuel regrowth following smaller-sized fires) fire-vegetation interactions in regulating tundra fire activity. Future modeling studies need more nuanced representations of fire-terrain and fire-vegetation interactions to accurately project how tundra ecosystems may respond to climatic warming.
format Text
author Masrur, Arif
Taylor, Alan
Harris, Lucas
Barnes, Jennifer
Petrov, Andrey
author_facet Masrur, Arif
Taylor, Alan
Harris, Lucas
Barnes, Jennifer
Petrov, Andrey
author_sort Masrur, Arif
title Topography, Climate And Fire History Regulate Wildfire Activity In The Alaskan Tundra
title_short Topography, Climate And Fire History Regulate Wildfire Activity In The Alaskan Tundra
title_full Topography, Climate And Fire History Regulate Wildfire Activity In The Alaskan Tundra
title_fullStr Topography, Climate And Fire History Regulate Wildfire Activity In The Alaskan Tundra
title_full_unstemmed Topography, Climate And Fire History Regulate Wildfire Activity In The Alaskan Tundra
title_sort topography, climate and fire history regulate wildfire activity in the alaskan tundra
publisher UNI ScholarWorks
publishDate 2022
url https://scholarworks.uni.edu/facpub/5229
https://doi.org/10.1029/2021JG006608
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Brooks Range
Climate change
Tundra
Alaska
genre_facet Arctic
Brooks Range
Climate change
Tundra
Alaska
op_source Faculty Publications
op_relation https://scholarworks.uni.edu/facpub/5229
doi:10.1029/2021JG006608
https://doi.org/10.1029/2021JG006608
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1029/2021JG006608
container_title Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences
container_volume 127
container_issue 3
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