烧伤面积和严重程度的全球模式和动态

Remote. Sens. Pub Date : 2023-07-04 DOI:10.3390/rs15133401
V. Fernández-García, E. Alonso‐González
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引用次数: 1

摘要

人们普遍认为,由于气候变化,世界范围内的火灾面积和严重程度正在增加。这一问题促使以前基于卫星图像的分析显示,全球燃烧面积呈减少趋势。然而,很少有研究涉及烧伤严重程度的趋势,很少将其与气候变量联系起来,而且没有一个是在全球范围内进行的。在此背景下,我们通过生物群系和大陆特征描述了17年来森林燃烧面积和严重程度的时空格局,并分析了它们与气候的关系。非洲洪水和非洪水草原和稀树草原是地球上最容易发生火灾的生物群落,而针叶林和苔原则表现出最高的燃烧严重程度。我们的时间分析更新了全球燃烧面积呈下降趋势的证据(- 1.50%;P < 0.01),高严重程度烧伤面积比例增加(0.95%;P < 0.05)。同样,平均烧伤严重程度显著增加的地区和严重程度较高的烧伤面积超过了显著减少的地区。其中,南美洲温带阔叶林和混交林以及澳大利亚热带湿润阔叶林严重烧伤面积的增加尤为强烈。虽然燃烧面积和严重程度的空间格局明显受到气候的驱动,但我们没有发现气候变暖会随着时间的推移而增加燃烧面积和严重程度,这表明其他因素是当前全球范围内火灾状况变化的主要驱动因素。
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Global Patterns and Dynamics of Burned Area and Burn Severity
It is a widespread assumption that burned area and severity are increasing worldwide due to climate change. This issue has motivated former analysis based on satellite imagery, revealing a decreasing trend in global burned areas. However, few studies have addressed burn severity trends, rarely relating them to climate variables, and none of them at the global scale. Within this context, we characterized the spatiotemporal patterns of burned area and severity by biomes and continents and we analyzed their relationships with climate over 17 years. African flooded and non-flooded grasslands and savannas were the most fire-prone biomes on Earth, whereas taiga and tundra exhibited the highest burn severity. Our temporal analysis updated the evidence of a decreasing trend in the global burned area (−1.50% year−1; p < 0.01) and revealed increases in the fraction of burned area affected by high severity (0.95% year−1; p < 0.05). Likewise, the regions with significant increases in mean burn severity, and burned areas at high severity outnumbered those with significant decreases. Among them, increases in severely burned areas in the temperate broadleaf and mixed forests of South America and tropical moist broadleaf forests of Australia were particularly intense. Although the spatial patterns of burned area and severity are clearly driven by climate, we did not find climate warming to increase burned area and burn severity over time, suggesting other factors as the primary drivers of current shifts in fire regimes at the planetary scale.
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