Land cover change interacts with drought severity to change fire regimes in Western Amazonia

Fire is becoming a pervasive driver of environmental change in Amazonia and is expected to intensify, given projected reductions in precipitation and forest cover. Understanding of the influence of post‐deforestation land cover change on fires in Amazonia is limited, even though fires in cleared lan...

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Main Authors: Gutiérrez Vélez, Victor Hugo, Uriarte, M.A, DeFries, Ruth S., Pinedo Vasquez, M., Fernandes, K., Ceccato, P, Baethgen, Walter E., Padoch, Christine
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Wiley 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/95498
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author Gutiérrez Vélez, Victor Hugo
Uriarte, M.A
DeFries, Ruth S.
Pinedo Vasquez, M.
Fernandes, K.
Ceccato, P
Baethgen, Walter E.
Padoch, Christine
author_browse Baethgen, Walter E.
Ceccato, P
DeFries, Ruth S.
Fernandes, K.
Gutiérrez Vélez, Victor Hugo
Padoch, Christine
Pinedo Vasquez, M.
Uriarte, M.A
author_facet Gutiérrez Vélez, Victor Hugo
Uriarte, M.A
DeFries, Ruth S.
Pinedo Vasquez, M.
Fernandes, K.
Ceccato, P
Baethgen, Walter E.
Padoch, Christine
author_sort Gutiérrez Vélez, Victor Hugo
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Fire is becoming a pervasive driver of environmental change in Amazonia and is expected to intensify, given projected reductions in precipitation and forest cover. Understanding of the influence of post‐deforestation land cover change on fires in Amazonia is limited, even though fires in cleared lands constitute a threat for ecosystems, agriculture, and human health. We used MODIS satellite data to map burned areas annually between 2001 and 2010. We then combined these maps with land cover and climate information to understand the influence of land cover change in cleared lands and dry‐season severity on fire occurrence and spread in a focus area in the Peruvian Amazon. Fire occurrence, quantified as the probability of burning of individual 232‐m spatial resolution MODIS pixels, was modeled as a function of the area of land cover types within each pixel, drought severity, and distance to roads. Fire spread, quantified as the number of pixels burned in 3 × 3 pixel windows around each focal burned pixel, was modeled as a function of land cover configuration and area, dry‐season severity, and distance to roads. We found that vegetation regrowth and oil palm expansion are significantly correlated with fire occurrence, but that the magnitude and sign of the correlation depend on drought severity, successional stage of regrowing vegetation, and oil palm age. Burning probability increased with the area of nondegraded pastures, fallow, and young oil palm and decreased with larger extents of degraded pastures, secondary forests, and adult oil palm plantations. Drought severity had the strongest influence on fire occurrence, overriding the effectiveness of secondary forests, but not of adult plantations, to reduce fire occurrence in severely dry years. Overall, irregular and scattered land cover patches reduced fire spread but irregular and dispersed fallows and secondary forests increased fire spread during dry years. Results underscore the importance of land cover management for reducing fire proliferation in this landscape. Incentives for promoting natural regeneration and perennial crops in cleared lands might help to reduce fire risk if those areas are protected against burning in early stages of development and during severely dry years.
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spelling CGSpace954982025-06-17T08:23:24Z Land cover change interacts with drought severity to change fire regimes in Western Amazonia Gutiérrez Vélez, Victor Hugo Uriarte, M.A DeFries, Ruth S. Pinedo Vasquez, M. Fernandes, K. Ceccato, P Baethgen, Walter E. Padoch, Christine fires forest fires climate change fire behaviour oil palms plantations deforestation forests landscape patterns ecology Fire is becoming a pervasive driver of environmental change in Amazonia and is expected to intensify, given projected reductions in precipitation and forest cover. Understanding of the influence of post‐deforestation land cover change on fires in Amazonia is limited, even though fires in cleared lands constitute a threat for ecosystems, agriculture, and human health. We used MODIS satellite data to map burned areas annually between 2001 and 2010. We then combined these maps with land cover and climate information to understand the influence of land cover change in cleared lands and dry‐season severity on fire occurrence and spread in a focus area in the Peruvian Amazon. Fire occurrence, quantified as the probability of burning of individual 232‐m spatial resolution MODIS pixels, was modeled as a function of the area of land cover types within each pixel, drought severity, and distance to roads. Fire spread, quantified as the number of pixels burned in 3 × 3 pixel windows around each focal burned pixel, was modeled as a function of land cover configuration and area, dry‐season severity, and distance to roads. We found that vegetation regrowth and oil palm expansion are significantly correlated with fire occurrence, but that the magnitude and sign of the correlation depend on drought severity, successional stage of regrowing vegetation, and oil palm age. Burning probability increased with the area of nondegraded pastures, fallow, and young oil palm and decreased with larger extents of degraded pastures, secondary forests, and adult oil palm plantations. Drought severity had the strongest influence on fire occurrence, overriding the effectiveness of secondary forests, but not of adult plantations, to reduce fire occurrence in severely dry years. Overall, irregular and scattered land cover patches reduced fire spread but irregular and dispersed fallows and secondary forests increased fire spread during dry years. Results underscore the importance of land cover management for reducing fire proliferation in this landscape. Incentives for promoting natural regeneration and perennial crops in cleared lands might help to reduce fire risk if those areas are protected against burning in early stages of development and during severely dry years. 2014-09 2018-07-03T11:03:06Z 2018-07-03T11:03:06Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/95498 en Limited Access Wiley Gutierrez-Velez, V.H., Uriarte, M., DeFries, R., Pinedo-Vasquez, M., Fernandes, K., Ceccato, P., Baethgen, W., Padoch, C. . 2014. Land cover change interacts with drought severity to change fire regimes in Western Amazonia Ecological Applications, 24 (6) : 1323–1340. https://doi.org/10.1890/13-2101.1
spellingShingle fires
forest fires
climate change
fire behaviour
oil palms
plantations
deforestation
forests
landscape
patterns
ecology
Gutiérrez Vélez, Victor Hugo
Uriarte, M.A
DeFries, Ruth S.
Pinedo Vasquez, M.
Fernandes, K.
Ceccato, P
Baethgen, Walter E.
Padoch, Christine
Land cover change interacts with drought severity to change fire regimes in Western Amazonia
title Land cover change interacts with drought severity to change fire regimes in Western Amazonia
title_full Land cover change interacts with drought severity to change fire regimes in Western Amazonia
title_fullStr Land cover change interacts with drought severity to change fire regimes in Western Amazonia
title_full_unstemmed Land cover change interacts with drought severity to change fire regimes in Western Amazonia
title_short Land cover change interacts with drought severity to change fire regimes in Western Amazonia
title_sort land cover change interacts with drought severity to change fire regimes in western amazonia
topic fires
forest fires
climate change
fire behaviour
oil palms
plantations
deforestation
forests
landscape
patterns
ecology
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/95498
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