4.4 Article

An analysis of the recent fire regimes in the Angolan catchment of the Okavango Delta, Central Africa

期刊

FIRE ECOLOGY
卷 18, 期 1, 页码 -

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1186/s42408-022-00138-3

关键词

Angola; Botswana; Miombo; MODIS; Remote sensing; Savanna

资金

  1. National Geographic Society through the Okavango Wilderness Project
  2. Wild Bird Trust

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This study analyzes the fire regimes in the poorly studied Angolan catchment of the Okavango Delta in Botswana using MODIS data. The results show variations in fire frequency among different vegetation types and little impact of human presence on fire return intervals. Fires primarily occur between June and September, with the late dry season being the peak period. Deforestation of miombo woodlands and the consequent introduction of fire pose a potential threat to the ecological stability of the Okavango Delta.
Background This paper presents an analysis of fire regimes in the poorly studied Angolan catchment of the Okavango Delta in Botswana. We used MODIS data to examine the frequency and seasonality of fires over 20 years (from 2000 to 2020) in three dominant vegetation types (miombo woodlands, open woodlands and grasslands, and short closed to open bushlands), and in areas where people were present, and where they were absent. Results The median fire return intervals for both open woodlands and grasslands and short bushlands were relatively short (1.9 and 2.2 years respectively). In miombo woodlands, fires were less frequent (median return periods of 4.5 years). Human population density had no discernible effect on the fire return intervals, but about 14% of the miombo woodlands experienced no fires over 20 years. Ongoing shifting cultivation within miombo woodlands has led to structural changes and the introduction of fire into this vegetation type where fires were rare or absent in the past. About 12% of the miombo did not burn during the period examined where people were present, whereas close to 20% of the sites remained unburnt where people were absent. This suggests that people did not change the fire return interval in any of the vegetation types studied, but that they altered the amount of the landscape that is flammable in miombo vegetation. Fires occurred between June and September, with a peak in the late dry season (August and September). Conclusions Historical research indicates that late dry-season fires are detrimental to miombo woodlands, and our analysis suggests that degradation in parts of the catchment has led to the introduction of fire to this previously fire-free and fire-sensitive vegetation type. Deforestation of miombo woodlands, and the consequent introduction of fire, is a cause for concern with respect to the ecological stability of the Okavango Delta. Managers should therefore aim to protect the remaining closed-canopy miombo stands from further clearing and to attempt to shift the timing of burns to the early dry season to reduce their intensity.

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