Climate and wildfire area burned in western U.S. ecoprovinces, 1916–2003
University of Washington · Pacific Northwest Research Station · +3 more institutions
Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to quantify climatic controls on the area burned by fire in different vegetation types in the western United States. We demonstrate that wildfire area burned (WFAB) in the American West was controlled by climate during the 20th century (1916-2003). Persistent ecosystem-specific correlations between climate and WFAB are grouped by vegetation type (ecoprovinces). Most mountainous ecoprovinces exhibit strong year-of-fire relationships with low precipitation, low Palmer drought severity index (PDSI), and high temperature. Grass- and shrub-dominated ecoprovinces had positive relationships with antecedent precipitation or PDSI. For 1977-2003, a few climate variables explain 33-87% (mean…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 30.97
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 63
Authors
4- JSJeremy S. LittellCorresponding
University of Washington
- DMDonald McKenzie
University of Washington, Pacific Northwest Research Station
- DLDavid L. Peterson
Pacific Northwest Research Station
- ALA. L. Westerling
Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, Merced, University of California San Diego
Topics & keywords
- Environmental science
- Precipitation
- Climate change
- Vegetation (pathology)
- Fire regime
- Ecosystem
- Context (archaeology)
- Grassland
- Climate action