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Global Pyrogeography: the Current and Future Distribution of Wildfire

Overview of attention for article published in PLOS ONE, April 2009
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Title
Global Pyrogeography: the Current and Future Distribution of Wildfire
Published in
PLOS ONE, April 2009
DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0005102
Pubmed ID
Authors

Meg A. Krawchuk, Max A. Moritz, Marc-André Parisien, Jeff Van Dorn, Katharine Hayhoe

Abstract

Climate change is expected to alter the geographic distribution of wildfire, a complex abiotic process that responds to a variety of spatial and environmental gradients. How future climate change may alter global wildfire activity, however, is still largely unknown. As a first step to quantifying potential change in global wildfire, we present a multivariate quantification of environmental drivers for the observed, current distribution of vegetation fires using statistical models of the relationship between fire activity and resources to burn, climate conditions, human influence, and lightning flash rates at a coarse spatiotemporal resolution (100 km, over one decade). We then demonstrate how these statistical models can be used to project future changes in global fire patterns, highlighting regional hotspots of change in fire probabilities under future climate conditions as simulated by a global climate model. Based on current conditions, our results illustrate how the availability of resources to burn and climate conditions conducive to combustion jointly determine why some parts of the world are fire-prone and others are fire-free. In contrast to any expectation that global warming should necessarily result in more fire, we find that regional increases in fire probabilities may be counter-balanced by decreases at other locations, due to the interplay of temperature and precipitation variables. Despite this net balance, our models predict substantial invasion and retreat of fire across large portions of the globe. These changes could have important effects on terrestrial ecosystems since alteration in fire activity may occur quite rapidly, generating ever more complex environmental challenges for species dispersing and adjusting to new climate conditions. Our findings highlight the potential for widespread impacts of climate change on wildfire, suggesting severely altered fire regimes and the need for more explicit inclusion of fire in research on global vegetation-climate change dynamics and conservation planning.

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Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
United States 27 3%
France 5 <1%
Brazil 5 <1%
Germany 4 <1%
Canada 4 <1%
Spain 3 <1%
Czechia 3 <1%
Australia 3 <1%
Portugal 2 <1%
Other 14 2%
Unknown 836 92%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Researcher 190 21%
Student > Ph. D. Student 157 17%
Student > Master 123 14%
Student > Bachelor 60 7%
Student > Doctoral Student 50 6%
Other 150 17%
Unknown 176 19%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Environmental Science 276 30%
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 180 20%
Earth and Planetary Sciences 122 13%
Engineering 28 3%
Social Sciences 18 2%
Other 59 7%
Unknown 223 25%