Authors
Yang Chen, Douglas C Morton, Niels Andela, Guido R Van Der Werf, Louis Giglio, James T Randerson
Publication date
2017/12
Journal
Nature climate change
Volume
7
Issue
12
Pages
906-911
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
The El Niño/Southern Oscillation (ENSO) has a pronounced influence on year-to-year variations in climate. The response of fires to this forcing is complex and has not been evaluated systematically across different continents. Here we use satellite data to create a climatology of burned-area and fire-emissions responses, drawing on six El Niño and six La Niña events during 1997–2016. On average, reductions in precipitation and terrestrial water storage increased fire emissions in pan-tropical forests by 133% during and following El Niño as compared with La Niña. Fires peaked in equatorial Asia early in the ENSO cycle when El Niño was strengthening (Aug–Oct), before moving to southeast Asia and northern South America (Jan–Apr), Central America (Mar–May) and the southern Amazon (Jul–Oct) during the following year. Large decreases in fire occurred across northern Australia during Sep–Oct of the second …
Total citations
20182019202020212022202320247213328302114
Scholar articles
Y Chen, DC Morton, N Andela, GR Van Der Werf… - Nature climate change, 2017