Title: Climate Change Impacts on Fire Regimes
1Climate Change Impacts on Fire Regimes
October 3, 2007 Incendios forestales lucha o
adaptación? Spanish Royal Academy of
Sciences Fundación Ramón Areces Anthony
Westerling UC Merced l NOAA OGP USDA Forest
Service California Energy Commission
2Plan of Presentation
- Why did forest fires increase in the Western US,
but not other kinds of fire? - What are the links between climate, vegetation,
and fire? - What do they imply about fire regime response to
climate change? - What is the greatest source of uncertainty about
wildfire under climate change?
3Federal Agencies Manage Most of the Wests Wild
Lands
4Since the mid-1980s Large Forest Wildfires Have
Increased 300
5Since the mid-1980s Large Forest Wildfires Have
Increased 300
Other Large Wildfires Have Not Changed Substantial
ly
6Why Has Forest Wildfire Increased?
- Management
- Grazing and fire suppression reduced burned area
- Reduced burned area led to biomass accumulation
in some forests - Increased biomass reduced the effectiveness of
suppression efforts
- Climate
- Fire activity driven by antecedent moisture and
concurrent drought - Climatologic extremes have been more frequent in
recent decades
7Consequences? Fuel accumulation reduces
effectiveness of suppression
1867 American River
81993 American River
9 biggest increase in wildfires risks least
affected by suppression
10Western U.S. Population, 1900 - 2020
Census Projection
11 but total ignitions have not.
12Why Has Wildfire Activity Increased?
- Management
- fire suppression reduced burned area mid-20th
century - Reduced burned area led to biomass accumulation
in some forests - Increased biomass reduced the effectiveness of
suppression efforts
- Climate
- Fire activity driven by antecedent moisture and
concurrent drought - Climatologic extremes have been more frequent in
recent decades
13Each fire is matched with the average Annual
PRECIPITATION Summer TEMPERATURE at its
location, and an index of DROUGHT during the
year the fire burned
14Woodland Fraction
Forest Fraction
Grassland Fraction
Shrubland Fraction
15Mapping the Western US in terms of Temperature
and Precipitation
16Typical Summer Temperatures
17Warm Places
18Cool Places
19Typical Annual Precipitation
20Dry Places
21Wet Places
22(No Transcript)
23Deserts
Forests
24How dry is the year when large fires burn?
25WET
DRY
26Warm, Dry Deserts Burn in Wet or Neutral Years
27Cool, Wet Forests Burn in Dry Years
28Was the year before the fire burned wet or dry?
29Dry Deserts and Grasslands burn after a wet year
30Cool, Wet Forests do not usually burn after wet
years
31WHY DO WE SEE THESE PATTERNS?
32Climate influences Wildfire through its
effects on Fuel Availability And Fuel
Flammability
Deserts
Forests
33vegetation is sparse here because the climate is
hot and dry so there is not so much
fuel and fire risks are sensitive to the
moisture available to grow more vegetation
Deserts
Forests
34Deserts
vegetation is dense here because the climate is
cool and moist so there is a lot of fuel
and fire risks are very sensitive to factors
that dry the fuels.
Forests
35Grass/Shrub fires follow WET years
Forests burn when they are DRY
Preceding years
Year of Fire
36Percent of West in Drought or Wet Conditions
37Percent of West in Drought or Wet Conditions
Mean Western MAMJJA Temperature
Westerling
38Grass/Shrub Fires and Temperature
Correlation 0.08
Westerling
39Forest Fires Temperature
Correlation 0.70
Westerling
40Westerling et al, 2006 Science
41Forest Fires Timing of Spring
Correlation 0.56
Westerling
42(No Transcript)
43Westerling
44(No Transcript)
45Early - Late Mar to Aug Temp
Early - Late Oct to May Precip
46Most forest fires occur in years with early
Springs
at elevations around 7000 feet
47Late Snowmelt Years
Early Snowmelt Years
1972 - 2003, NPS, USFS BIA Fires over 1000 acres
48A2 PCM
A2 GFDL
49Different Impacts Within CA
The Greatest Increased CA Wildfire Risks
are Concentrated in Northern California Greater
Uncertainty for Wildfire Risks in Southern
California
Wetter Scenarios
Drier Scenarios
Increasing Temperature
50Warming has fostered earlier spring snowmelt and
more forest wildfire in the Western US Spring
and Summer average temperatures increased less
than 1C The number of large fires increased
300 Area burned in these fires increased
600 Fire season length increased 78 days
(64) Fires burn on average 5 weeks (up from 1
week) IPCC 4th Assessment projects June - August
temperature increases of 2 to 5C Further
temperature increases will result in more very
active forest wildfire seasons
51Wildfires in fuel-limited regimes did not show
dramatic increases while variability increased,
there was not a clear trend in
precipitation these fires were not sensitive to
observed trends in temperature Uncertainty
about future precipitation in global change
models resulted in significant uncertainty about
the magnitude and direction of change in
fuel-limited wildfire regimes
52Western mountain forests account for 20 - 40 of
annual carbon taken up by US ecosystems
(Schimmel) Wildfires annually add 40 of fossil
fuel carbon emissions (van der Werf) Increased
frequency and severity of forest wildfires may
accelerate the buildup of greenhouse gases and
could provide a feed-forward acceleration of
global warming (Running)