4.7 Article

Potential shifts in dominant forest cover in interior Alaska driven by variations in fire severity

Journal

ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS
Volume 21, Issue 7, Pages 2380-2396

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1890/10-0896.1

Keywords

Alaska; black spruce; boreal forest; climate change; fire severity; land cover change; organic layer of soil; Picea mariana; successional shifts

Funding

  1. National Aeronautics and Space Administration [NNG04GD25G, NNX06AF85G]
  2. Bonanza Creek Long-Term Ecological Research Program
  3. USDA Forest Service [PNW01-JV11261952-231]
  4. NSF [DEB-0080609, DEB-0423442]
  5. USDA Forest Service Pacific Northwest Research Station [PNW01-JV11261952-231]
  6. USDA [2008-35615-18959]
  7. NASA
  8. Division Of Environmental Biology
  9. Direct For Biological Sciences [1026415] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Large fire years in which >1% of the landscape burns are becoming more frequent in the Alaskan (USA) interior, with four large fire years in the past 10 years, and 79 000 km 2 (17% of the region) burned since 2000. We modeled fire severity conditions for the entire area burned in large fires during a large fire year (2004) to determine the factors that are most important in estimating severity and to identify areas affected by deep-burning fires. In addition to standard methods of assessing severity using spectral information, we incorporated information regarding topography, spatial pattern of burning, and instantaneous characteristics such as fire weather and fire radiative power. Ensemble techniques using regression trees as a base learner were able to determine fire severity successfully using spectral data in concert with other relevant geospatial data. This method was successful in estimating average conditions, but it underestimated the range of severity. This new approach was used to identify black spruce stands that experienced intermediate-to high-severity fires in 2004 and are therefore susceptible to a shift in regrowth toward deciduous dominance or mixed dominance. Based on the output of the severity model, we estimate that 39% (similar to 4000 km(2)) of all burned black spruce stands in 2004 had <10 cm of residual organic layer and may be susceptible a postfire shift in plant functional type dominance, as well as permafrost loss. If the fraction of area susceptible to deciduous regeneration is constant for large fire years, the effect of such years in the most recent decade has been to reduce black spruce stands by 4.2% and to increase areas dominated or co-dominated by deciduous forest stands by 20%. Such disturbance-driven modifications have the potential to affect the carbon cycle and climate system at regional to global scales.

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