Authors
Niels Andela, Douglas C Morton, Louis Giglio, Yang Chen, Guido R van der Werf, Prasad S Kasibhatla, Rurth S DeFries, GJ Collatz, S Hantson, Silvia Kloster, Dominique Bachelet, Matthew Forrest, Gitta Lasslop, F Li, Stephane Mangeon, Joe R Melton, Chao Yue, JT Randerson
Publication date
2017/6/30
Journal
Science
Volume
356
Issue
6345
Pages
1356-1362
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Description
Fire is an essential Earth system process that alters ecosystem and atmospheric composition. Here we assessed long-term fire trends using multiple satellite data sets. We found that global burned area declined by 24.3 ± 8.8% over the past 18 years. The estimated decrease in burned area remained robust after adjusting for precipitation variability and was largest in savannas. Agricultural expansion and intensification were primary drivers of declining fire activity. Fewer and smaller fires reduced aerosol concentrations, modified vegetation structure, and increased the magnitude of the terrestrial carbon sink. Fire models were unable to reproduce the pattern and magnitude of observed declines, suggesting that they may overestimate fire emissions in future projections. Using economic and demographic variables, we developed a conceptual model for predicting fire in human-dominated landscapes.
Total citations
20172018201920202021202220232024109210611418217317595
Scholar articles
N Andela, DC Morton, L Giglio, Y Chen… - Science, 2017