Increasing western US forest wildfire activity: sensitivity to changes in the timing of spring
Google (United States) · University of California, Merced
Abstract
Prior work shows western US forest wildfire activity increased abruptly in the mid-1980s. Large forest wildfires and areas burned in them have continued to increase over recent decades, with most of the increase in lightning-ignited fires. Northern US Rockies forests dominated early increases in wildfire activity, and still contributed 50% of the increase in large fires over the last decade. However, the percentage growth in wildfire activity in Pacific northwestern and southwestern US forests has rapidly increased over the last two decades. Wildfire numbers and burned area are also increasing in non-forest vegetation types. Wildfire activity appears strongly associated with warming and earlier spring…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 61.00
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 30
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Spring (device)
- Environmental science
- Sensitivity (control systems)
- Physical geography
- Atmospheric sciences
- Hydrology (agriculture)
- Geology
- Geography
- Life in Land