4.4 Article

What is the color when black is burned? Quantifying (re)burn severity using field and satellite remote sensing indices

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FIRE ECOLOGY
卷 19, 期 1, 页码 -

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1186/s42408-023-00178-3

关键词

CBI; RdNBR; Wildfire; Disturbance interactions; Reburns; Stand-replacing fire; Extreme burn severity

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This study found that commonly used indices of burn severity may underestimate or overestimate the severity of fires in areas experiencing short-interval reburns. The degree of underestimation or overestimation depends on the severity of the fire preceding a reburn. Adjustments to burn severity measurements are crucial in accurately assessing the severity of short-interval reburns.
BackgroundTrends of increasing area burned in many regions worldwide are leading to more locations experiencing short-interval reburns (i.e., fires occurring two or more times in the same place within 1-3 decades). Field and satellite indices of burn severity are well tested in forests experiencing a single recent fire, but the reliability of these indices in short-interval reburns is poorly understood. We tested how a commonly used field index (the Composite Burn Index, CBI) and satellite index (the Relative differenced Normalized Burn Ratio, RdNBR) compared to eight individual field measures of burn severity in short-interval reburns vs. areas burned in one recent fire, and whether results depended on whether the first fire was stand replacing (fire that is lethal to most dominant trees).ResultsCorrespondence between both CBI and RdNBR with individual burn severity measures differed in short-interval reburns compared to single fires for some metrics of burn severity. Divergence in the relationship between both CBI and RdNBR vs. field measures was greatest when short-interval reburns followed a prior stand-replacing fire, and measures were more comparable to single fires when the first fire was non-stand replacing (i.e., lower severity). When short-interval reburns followed prior stand-replacing fires, CBI and RdNBR underestimated burn severity in the second fire for tree-canopy metrics (e.g., canopy cover loss, tree mortality), as young forests in early developmental stages are more sensitive to a second fire. Conversely, when short-interval reburns followed prior less-than-stand-replacing fires, both CBI and RdNBR overestimated burn severity for forest-floor metrics, as past low severity fires leave behind live fire-resistant trees and can stimulate resprouting understory vegetation. Finally, neither CBI nor RdNBR accurately detected deep wood charring-an important phenomenon that occurs in short-interval reburns.ConclusionOur findings inform interpretability of commonly used indices of burn severity in short-interval reburns by identifying how individual burn severity metrics can be under- or over-estimated, depending on the severity of the fire preceding a reburn. Adjustments to burn severity measurements made in short-interval reburns are particularly critical as reburned areas increase.

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