Authors
W John Calder, Dusty Parker, Cody J Stopka, Gonzalo Jiménez-Moreno, Bryan N Shuman
Publication date
2015/10/27
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
112
Issue
43
Pages
13261-13266
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Many of the largest wildfires in US history burned in recent decades, and climate change explains much of the increase in area burned. The frequency of extreme wildfire weather will increase with continued warming, but many uncertainties still exist about future fire regimes, including how the risk of large fires will persist as vegetation changes. Past fire-climate relationships provide an opportunity to constrain the related uncertainties, and reveal widespread burning across large regions of western North America during past warm intervals. Whether such episodes also burned large portions of individual landscapes has been difficult to determine, however, because uncertainties with the ages of past fires and limited spatial resolution often prohibit specific estimates of past area burned. Accounting for these challenges in a subalpine landscape in Colorado, we estimated century-scale fire synchroneity across 12 lake …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
WJ Calder, D Parker, CJ Stopka, G Jiménez-Moreno… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2015