4.5 Article

Carbon dioxide and particulate emissions from the 2013 Tasmanian firestorm: implications for Australian carbon accounting

相关参考文献

注意:仅列出部分参考文献,下载原文获取全部文献信息。
Editorial Material Ecology

Reply to: Logging elevated the probability of high-severity fire in the 2019-20 Australian forest fires

David M. J. S. Bowman et al.

NATURE ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION (2022)

Editorial Material Ecology

Logging elevated the probability of high-severity fire in the 2019-20 Australian forest fires

David B. Lindenmayer et al.

NATURE ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION (2022)

Article Environmental Sciences

Smoke health costs and the calculus for wildfires fuel management: a modelling study

Nicolas Borchers-Arriagada et al.

Lancet Planetary Health (2021)

Review Plant Sciences

Australian forests, megafires and the risk of dwindling carbon stocks

David M. J. S. Bowman et al.

Summary: During the spring and summer of 2019/20, over 7 million hectares of Eucalyptus forest and woodland on the east coast of Australia were burned, resulting in estimated CO2 emissions of approximately 0.67 Pg. The benefits of prescribed burning for managing carbon stores are controversial, and further research is urgently needed to determine the most effective interventions for maximizing carbon storage in the face of climate change-driven fires.

PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT (2021)

Article Green & Sustainable Science & Technology

Unprecedented health costs of smoke-related PM2.5from the 2019-20 Australian megafires

Fay H. Johnston et al.

Summary: The 2019-20 Australian fire season caused health-related costs of AU$1.95 billion, nine times the median for the previous 19 years.

NATURE SUSTAINABILITY (2021)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Multi-decadal increase of forest burned area in Australia is linked to climate change

Josep G. Canadell et al.

Summary: The frequency and area of forest fires in Australia have significantly increased in recent decades, mainly due to dangerous fire weather conditions caused by warmer temperatures and circulation changes. The trend of burned area in Australia's forests shows a linear positive annual trend but an exponential increase during autumn and winter.

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS (2021)

Article Environmental Sciences

Transforming fire management in northern Australia through successful implementation of savanna burning emissions reductions projects

Andrew Edwards et al.

Summary: Savannas are the most fire-prone of Earth's biomes and Australia has made substantial developments in savanna burning emissions accounting methods to incentivise conservative fire management. The savanna burning projects have generated significant emissions reductions and financial benefits, but biodiversity conservation considerations remain controversial. Despite achievements in reducing late season wildfires and increasing controlled burning, savanna burning projects do not solve all regional conservation and cultural management issues.

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT (2021)

News Item Multidisciplinary Sciences

AUSTRALIAN BUSH FIRES BELCHED OUT IMMENSE QUANTITY OF CARBON

Smriti Mallapaty

NATURE (2021)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Vast CO2 release from Australian fires in 2019-2020 constrained by satellite

Ivar R. van der Velde et al.

Summary: The amount of carbon dioxide released by the Australian wildfires of 2019-2020 is estimated to be more than twice the amount suggested by fire inventories, with a total of 715 teragrams estimated from November 2019 to January 2020. These wildfires were driven partly by climate change and highlight the importance of better-constrained emission estimates due to the potential impact on atmospheric carbon dioxide levels.

NATURE (2021)

Article Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences

Australia's Black Summer pyrocumulonimbus super outbreak reveals potential for increasingly extreme stratospheric smoke events

David A. Peterson et al.

Summary: The Black Summer fire season of 2019-2020 in southeastern Australia led to a large-scale outbreak of fire-induced and smoke-infused thunderstorms known as pyrocumulonimbus, with over half of the pyroCbs injecting smoke particles into the stratosphere. These smoke plumes persisted for an unusually long time and continued into nighttime, impacting the climate and environment significantly.

NPJ CLIMATE AND ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCE (2021)

Article Ecology

What Do the Australian Black Summer Fires Signify for the Global Fire Crisis?

Rachael H. Nolan et al.

Summary: The article discusses the catastrophic impact of the 2019-20 Australian fire season, attributing the fires to extreme climatic conditions while noting that hazard reduction burns have helped reduce fire severity and property loss to a certain extent. The impacts of the fires were disproportionately borne by socially disadvantaged regional communities, with urban populations also affected by prolonged smoke exposure.

FIRE-SWITZERLAND (2021)

Article Geosciences, Multidisciplinary

Attribution of the Australian bushfire risk to anthropogenic climate change

Geert Jan van Oldenborgh et al.

Summary: The study found that climate change has led to an increased risk of extreme fire seasons in southeastern Australia, primarily driven by temperature extremes. While climate models may underestimate the long-term trend in extreme temperatures, the likelihood of extreme heat events has doubled due to warming trends. Although no attributable trend was found in extreme annual drought, there was a weak drying trend in the annual mean, with factors such as Indian Ocean Dipole and Southern Annular Mode influencing the 2019/20 drought.

NATURAL HAZARDS AND EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCES (2021)

Review Environmental Sciences

Vegetation fires in the Anthropocene

David M. J. S. Bowman et al.

NATURE REVIEWS EARTH & ENVIRONMENT (2020)

Article Geosciences, Multidisciplinary

Evolution of a pyrocumulonimbus event associated with an extreme wildfire in Tasmania, Australia

Mercy N. Ndalila et al.

NATURAL HAZARDS AND EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCES (2020)

Article Geosciences, Multidisciplinary

Climate Change Increases the Potential for Extreme Wildfires

Giovanni Di Virgilio et al.

GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS (2019)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Biomass consumption by surface fires across Earth's most fire prone continent

Brett P. Murphy et al.

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY (2019)

Article Environmental Sciences

Emissions of trace gases from Australian temperate forest fires: emission factors and dependence on modified combustion efficiency

Elise-Andree Guerette et al.

ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS (2018)

Review Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences

Airborne measurements of western US wildfire emissions: Comparison with prescribed burning and air quality implications

Xiaoxi Liu et al.

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES (2017)

Article Environmental Sciences

Biomass burning at Cape Grim: exploring photochemistry using multi-scale modelling

Sarah J. Lawson et al.

ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS (2017)

Article Geosciences, Multidisciplinary

Global fire emissions estimates during 1997-2016

Guido R. van der Werf et al.

EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCE DATA (2017)

Review Environmental Sciences

Critical Review of Health Impacts of Wildfire Smoke Exposure

Colleen E. Reid et al.

ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH PERSPECTIVES (2016)

Article Environmental Sciences

A transdisciplinary approach to understanding the health effects of wildfire and prescribed fire smoke regimes

G. J. Williamson et al.

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS (2016)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Climate-induced variations in global wildfire danger from 1979 to 2013

W. Matt Jolly et al.

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS (2015)

Article Environmental Sciences

Greenhouse gas emissions from laboratory-scale fires in wildland fuels depend on fire spread mode and phase of combustion

N. C. Surawski et al.

ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS (2015)

Article Forestry

Wildland fire emissions, carbon, and climate: US emissions inventories

Narasimhan K. Larkin et al.

FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT (2014)

Article Forestry

Wildland fire emissions, carbon, and climate: Emission factors

Shawn Urbanski

FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT (2014)

Article Forestry

Wild land fire emissions, carbon and climate: Characterizing wildland fuels

David R. Weise et al.

FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT (2014)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Abrupt fire regime change may cause landscape-wide loss of mature obligate seeder forests

David M. J. S. Bowman et al.

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY (2014)

Article Forestry

Fuel reduction burning mitigates wildfire effects on forest carbon and greenhouse gas emission

Liubov Volkova et al.

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WILDLAND FIRE (2014)

Article Environmental Sciences

Global top-down smoke-aerosol emissions estimation using satellite fire radiative power measurements

C. Ichoku et al.

ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS (2014)

Article Environmental Sciences

El Nino and health risks from landscape fire emissions in southeast Asia

Miriam E. Marlier et al.

NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE (2013)

Review Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences

Bounding the role of black carbon in the climate system: A scientific assessment

T. C. Bond et al.

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES (2013)

Article Environmental Sciences

Estimated Global Mortality Attributable to Smoke from Landscape Fires

Fay H. Johnston et al.

ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH PERSPECTIVES (2012)

Article Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences

Direct measurements of the seasonality of emission factors from savanna fires in northern Australia

C. P. Meyer et al.

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES (2012)

Article Environmental Sciences

Determinants and predictability of global wildfire emissions

W. Knorr et al.

ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS (2012)

Article Engineering, Environmental

Creating an Integrated Historical Record of Extreme Particulate Air Pollution Events in Australian Cities from 1994 to 2007

Fay H. Johnston et al.

JOURNAL OF THE AIR & WASTE MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION (2011)

Review Environmental Sciences

Vegetation fire emissions and their impact on air pollution and climate

Baerbel Langmann et al.

ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT (2009)

Article Environmental Sciences

Predicting Sustained Fire Spread in Tasmanian Native Grasslands

Steven Leonard

ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT (2009)

Review Multidisciplinary Sciences

Fire in the Earth System

David M. J. S. Bowman et al.

SCIENCE (2009)

Article Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences

Characteristics and radiative impact of the aerosol generated by the Canberra firestorm of January 2003

RM Mitchell et al.

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES (2006)

Review Ecology

Coarse woody debris in Australian forest ecosystems: A review

G Woldendorp et al.

AUSTRAL ECOLOGY (2005)

Article Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences

Very high resolution interpolated climate surfaces for global land areas

RJ Hijmans et al.

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY (2005)

Review Environmental Sciences

A review of biomass burning emissions part II: intensive physical properties of biomass burning particles

JS Reid et al.

ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS (2005)

Article Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences

Trace gas and particle emissions from fires in large diameter and belowground biomass fuels

I Bertschi et al.

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES (2003)