Warming enabled upslope advance in western US forest fires

Source

Authors

University of California, Irvine

Published

2021

Description

In this scientific research article, the authors discuss how forest fires in the western United States have advanced upslope over the past few decades and are scorching territories previously too wet to burn. They document this upslope advancement of high-elevation fires and show how strong interannual links between aridity and high-elevation forest fires and reduced influence of fire exclusion policies in montane mesic forests imply that such changes are a byproduct of climate warming. The authors estimate that increased aridity between 1984-2017 has now exposed large new swaths of forests in California to fires, and that these changes have significant implications for terrestrial carbon storage, snowpack, and water quantity and quality.

Climate Impact Tags

Snowpack Wildfire

Adaptation Planning Guide Phases

Phase 2: Assess Vulnerability

Resource Type Tags

Scientific study

Topics

Extent: California

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Last updated: April 28, 2024