4.6 Article

El Nino Driven Changes in Global Fire 2015/16

Journal

FRONTIERS IN EARTH SCIENCE
Volume 8, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/feart.2020.00199

Keywords

El Nino; fire; burned area; emissions; carbon sink

Funding

  1. Newton Fund through the Met Office Climate Science for Service Partnership Brazil (CSSP Brazil)
  2. NERC [NE/N011570/1/]
  3. Sao Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP) [2015/50122-0, 2016/02018-2]
  4. Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq) [314016/2009-0, 442650/2018-3, 309247/20160]
  5. Inter-American Institute for Global Change Research (IAI) [SGP-HW 016]
  6. NERC [NE/N011570/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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El Nino years are characterized by a high sea surface temperature anomaly in the Equatorial Pacific Ocean, which leads to unusually warm and dry conditions over many fire-prone regions globally. This can lead to an increase in burned area and emissions from fire activity, and socio-economic, and environmental losses. Previous studies using satellite observations to assess the impacts of the recent 2015/16 El Nino found an increase in burned area in some regions compared to La Nina years. Here, we use the dynamic land surface model JULES to assess how conditions differed as a result of the El Nino by comparing simulations driven by observations from the year 2015/16 with mean climatological drivers of temperature, precipitation, humidity, wind, air pressure, and short and long-wave radiation. We use JULES with the interactive fire module INFERNO to assess the effects on precipitation, temperature, burned area, and the associated impacts on the carbon sink globally and for three regions: South America, Africa, and Asia. We find that the model projects a variable response in precipitation, with some areas including northern South America, southern Africa and East Asia getting drier, and most areas globally seeing an increase in temperature. As a result, higher burned area is simulated with El Nino conditions in most regions, although there are areas of both increased and decreased burned area over Africa. South America shows the largest fire response with El Nino, with a 13% increase in burned area and emitted carbon, corresponding with the largest decrease in carbon uptake. Within South America, peak fire occurs from August to October across central-southern Brazil, and temperature is shown to be the main driver of the El Nino-induced increase in burned area during this period. Combined, our results indicate that although 2015/16 was not a peak year for global total burned area or fire emissions, the El Nino led to an overall increase of 4% in burned area and 5% in emissions compared to a No El Nino scenario for 2015/16, and contributed to a 4% reduction in the terrestrial carbon sink.

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