Burned area and carbon emissions across northwestern boreal North America from 2001–2019
Fire is the dominant disturbance agent in Alaskan and Canadian boreal ecosystems and releases large amounts of carbon into the atmosphere. Burned area and carbon emissions have been increasing with climate change, which have the potential to alter the carbon balance and shift the region from a histo...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Biogeosciences 2023-07, Vol.20 (13), p.2785-2804 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Fire is the dominant disturbance agent in Alaskan and Canadian
boreal ecosystems and releases large amounts of carbon into the atmosphere.
Burned area and carbon emissions have been increasing with climate change,
which have the potential to alter the carbon balance and shift the region
from a historic sink to a source. It is therefore critically important to
track the spatiotemporal changes in burned area and fire carbon emissions
over time. Here we developed a new burned-area detection algorithm between
2001–2019 across Alaska and Canada at 500 m (meters) resolution that
utilizes finer-scale 30 m Landsat imagery to account for land cover
unsuitable for burning. This method strictly balances omission and
commission errors at 500 m to derive accurate landscape- and regional-scale
burned-area estimates. Using this new burned-area product, we developed
statistical models to predict burn depth and carbon combustion for the same
period within the NASA Arctic–Boreal Vulnerability Experiment (ABoVE) core
and extended domain. Statistical models were constrained using a database of
field observations across the domain and were related to a variety of
response variables including remotely sensed indicators of fire severity,
fire weather indices, local climate, soils, and topographic indicators. The
burn depth and aboveground combustion models performed best, with poorer
performance for belowground combustion. We estimate 2.37×106 ha (2.37 Mha) burned annually between 2001–2019 over the ABoVE domain (2.87 Mha
across all of Alaska and Canada), emitting 79.3 ± 27.96 Tg (±1
standard deviation) of carbon (C) per year, with a mean combustion
rate of 3.13 ± 1.17 kg C m−2. Mean combustion and burn depth
displayed a general gradient of higher severity in the northwestern portion
of the domain to lower severity in the south and east. We also found larger-fire years and later-season burning were generally associated with greater
mean combustion. Our estimates are generally consistent with previous
efforts to quantify burned area, fire carbon emissions, and their drivers in
regions within boreal North America; however, we generally estimate higher
burned area and carbon emissions due to our use of Landsat imagery, greater
availability of field observations, and improvements in modeling. The burned
area and combustion datasets described here (the ABoVE Fire Emissions
Database, or ABoVE-FED) can be used for local- to continental-scale
applications of boreal fire science. |
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ISSN: | 1726-4189 1726-4170 1726-4189 |
DOI: | 10.5194/bg-20-2785-2023 |