TY - JOUR PY - 2016// TI - Future burn probability in south-central British Columbia JO - International journal of wildland fire A1 - Wang, Xianli A1 - Parisien, Marc-Andre A1 - Taylor, Stephen W. A1 - Perrakis, Daniel D. B. A1 - Little, John A1 - Flannigan, Mike D. SP - 200 EP - 212 VL - 25 IS - 2 N2 - Little is known about how changing climates will affect the processes controlling fire ignition and spread. This study examines the effect of climate change on the factors that drive fire activity in a highly heterogeneous region of south-central British Columbia. Future fire activity was evaluated using Burn-P3, a simulation model used to estimate spatial burn probability (BP) by simulating a very large number of fires. We modified the following factors in the future projections of BP: (1) fuels (vegetation), (2) ignitions (number of fires), and (3) weather (daily conditions and duration of fires). Our results showed that the future climate will increase the number of fires and fire-conducive weather, leading to widespread BP increases. However, the conversion of current forest types to vegetation that is not as flammable may partially counteract the effect of increasing fire weather severity. The top-down factors (ignitions and weather) yield future BPs that are spatially coherent with the current patterns, whereas the changes due to future vegetation are highly divergent from today's BP. This study provides a framework for assessing the effect of specific agents of change on fire ignition and spread in landscapes with complex fire-climate-vegetation interactions.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 1049-8001 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/WF15091 ID - ref1 ER -