Climatic controls of fire activity in the red pine forests of eastern North America

•Fire histories over red pine distribution range revealed a strong climate signal.•PNA+ and PNA+/ENSO+ consistently correlated with fire-prone conditions.•The fire-prone climate states decreased in 1850 and increased during 1900s. Large-scale modes of climate variability influence forest fire activi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Agricultural and forest meteorology 2024-11, Vol.358, p.110219, Article 110219
Hauptverfasser: Robles, Daniela, Bergeron, Yves, Meunier, Jed, Stambaugh, Michael, Raymond, Patricia, Kryshen, Alexander, Goebel, Charles, Eden, Jonathan, Drobyshev, Igor
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Fire histories over red pine distribution range revealed a strong climate signal.•PNA+ and PNA+/ENSO+ consistently correlated with fire-prone conditions.•The fire-prone climate states decreased in 1850 and increased during 1900s. Large-scale modes of climate variability influence forest fire activity and may modulate the future patterns of natural disturbances. We studied the effects of long-term changes in climate upon the fire regime in the red pine forests of eastern North America using (a) a network of sites with dendrochronological reconstructions of fire histories over 1700–1900 A.D., (b) reconstructed chronologies of climate indices (1700–1900), and (c) 20th century observational records of climate indices, local surface climate and fire (1950s-2021). We hypothesized that (H1) there are states of atmospheric circulation that are consistently associated with increased fire activity, (H2) these states mark periods of increased climatological fire hazard, and (H3) the observed decline in fire activity in the 20th century is associated with a long-term decline in the frequency of fire-prone states. At the annual scale, years with significantly higher fire activity in the reconstructed and modern fire records were consistently associated with the positive phases of the Pacific North American pattern (PNA), either independently or in combination with the positive phase of the El Niño-Southern Oscillation index (ENSO). During years with both ENSO and PNA in their positive state, the region experienced positive mid-tropospheric heights and temperature anomalies resulting in drought conditions. The fire-prone climate states identified in the reconstructed records became less frequent in 1850 but re-emerged in the 20th century. While our study did not demonstrate a direct influence of climate on the observed decrease in fire activity in the 20th century, it does reveal a clear climate signal embedded within the fire history reconstruction of the region over the past centuries. This study underscores the importance of considering large-scale climatic patterns in understanding historical fire regimes and highlights their role for future fire dynamics in the region and shaping ecological effects of future fires.
ISSN:0168-1923
1873-2240
DOI:10.1016/j.agrformet.2024.110219