FIRE FREQUENCY, AREA BURNED, AND SEVERITY: A QUANTITATIVE APPROACH TO DEFINING A NORMAL FIRE YEAR

被引:69
作者
Lutz, James A. [1 ]
Key, Carl H. [2 ]
Kolden, Crystal A. [3 ]
Kane, Jonathan T. [1 ]
van Wagtendonk, Jan W. [4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Washington, Coll Environm, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
[2] US Geol Survey, Northern Rocky Mt Sci Ctr, Glacier Field Stn, West Glacier, MT 59936 USA
[3] Univ Idaho, Dept Geog, Moscow, ID 83844 USA
[4] US Geol Survey, Western Ecol Res Ctr, Yosemite Field Stn, El Portal, CA 95318 USA
关键词
differenced Normalized Burn Ratio; fire severity; fire severity normals; Sierra Nevada; Weibull distribution; Yosemite National Park; YOSEMITE-NATIONAL-PARK; CLIMATE-CHANGE; PRONE FORESTS; CALIFORNIA; 20TH-CENTURY;
D O I
10.4996/fireecology.0702051
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Fire frequency, area burned, and fire severity are important attributes of a fire regime, but few studies have quantified the interrelationships among them in evaluating a fire year. Although area burned is often used to summarize a fire season, burned area may not be well correlated with either the number or ecological effect of fires. Using the Landsat data archive, we examined all 148 wildland fires (prescribed fires and wildfires) >40 ha from 1984 through 2009 for the portion of the Sierra Nevada centered on Yosemite National Park, California, USA. We calculated mean fire frequency and mean annual area burned from a combination of field- and satellite-derived data. We used the continuous probability distribution of the differenced Normalized Burn Ratio (dNBR) values to describe fire severity. For fires >40 ha, fire frequency, annual area burned, and cumulative severity were consistent in only 13 of 26 years (50%), but all pair-wise comparisons among these fire regime attributes were significant. Borrowing from long-established practice in climate science, we defined "fire normals" to be the 26 year means of fire frequency, annual area burned, and the area under the cumulative probability distribution of dNBR. Fire severity normals were significantly lower when they were aggregated by year compared to aggregation by area. Cumulative severity distributions for each year were best modeled with Weibull functions (all 26 years, r(2) >= 0.99; P < 0.001). Explicit modeling of the cumulative severity distributions may allow more comprehensive modeling of climate-severity and area-severity relationships. Together, the three metrics of number of fires, size of fires, and severity of fires provide land managers with a more comprehensive summary of a given fire year than any single metric.
引用
收藏
页码:51 / 65
页数:15
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