The effect of climate anomalies and human ignition factor on wildfires in Russian boreal forests
- 15 November 2007
- journal article
- review article
- Published by The Royal Society in Philosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 363 (1501) , 2329-2337
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2007.2203
Abstract
Over the last few years anomalies in temperature and precipitation in northern Russia have been regarded as manifestations of climate change. During the same period exceptional forest fire seasons have been reported, prompting many authors to suggest that these in turn are due to climate change. In this paper, we examine the number and areal extent of forest fires across boreal Russia for the period 2002–2005 within two forest categories: ‘intact forests’ and ‘non-intact forests’. Results show a far lower density of fire events in intact forests (5–14 times less) and that those events tend to be in the first 10 km buffer zone inside intact forest areas. Results also show that, during exceptional climatic years (2002 and 2003), fire event density is twice that found during normal years (2004 and 2005) and average areal extent of fire events (burned area) in intact forests is 2.5 times larger than normal. These results suggest that a majority of the fire events in boreal Russia are of human origin and a maximum of one-third of their impact (areal extension) can be attributed to climate anomalies alone, the rest being due to the combined effect of human disturbances and climate anomalies.Keywords
This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- GLC2000: a new approach to global land cover mapping from Earth observation dataInternational Journal of Remote Sensing, 2005
- Observations on the Problematic Potential of Russian Oil and the Complexities of SiberiaEurasian Geography and Economics, 2004
- Examining the potential of using remotely sensed fire data to predict areas of rapid forest change in South AmericaApplied Geography, 2003
- Fire science for rainforestsNature, 2003
- A new SPOT4-VEGETATION derived land cover map of Northern EurasiaInternational Journal of Remote Sensing, 2003
- Determining Effects of Area Burned and Fire Severity on Carbon Cycling and Emissions in SiberiaClimatic Change, 2002
- Natural fire frequency for the eastern Canadian boreal forest: consequences for sustainable forestryCanadian Journal of Forest Research, 2001
- Climate Change and Forest DisturbancesBioScience, 2001
- Climate change and forest firesScience of The Total Environment, 2000
- Remote Sensing of Biomass Burning in Tropical RegionsRemote Sensing of Environment, 1998