Climate, topography, or fuels? Top-down versus bottom-up controls on fire refugia across British Columbia, Canada

IF 2.9 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q2 ECOLOGY
Ecosphere Pub Date : 2025-09-04 DOI:10.1002/ecs2.70385
Christine E. Kuntzemann, Ellen Whitman, Doug Lewis, Diana Stralberg
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Abstract

Surviving pockets of vegetation within fire perimeters, termed fire refugia, are an important component of ecological recovery following disturbance. Understanding the relative influence of the drivers of fire refugia throughout diverse landscapes and climate conditions can help identify areas that are conducive to their formation. We investigated the role of various top-down (climate) and bottom-up (fuels, physical setting) controls on fire refugia creation throughout 21 unique fire regime units in the forests of British Columbia, Canada, over a 20-year (2000–2019) period. Boosted regression tree models were used to determine the relative influence of each of these controls and their associated variables on fire refugia, as well as to create predictive maps of fire refugia probabilities over a range of annual climate conditions. We found that the bottom-up controls, particularly variables relating to physical setting, generally held the greatest influence on fire refugia creation, though those relating to fuels were of higher importance in the more disturbance-prone forests of the boreal and central interior regions. These bottom-up controls, however, can be overwhelmed by extreme climate conditions, which have variable effects on refugia depending on the region. There was an overall positive correspondence between locations of persistent (long-term) fire refugia and mapped old-growth, suggesting that strong, static terrain features may shelter some forests over the course of multiple fire events, allowing for the development of old-growth stands. We concluded that, while strong topographic features confer the strongest measure of protection in some regions of the province, there are many areas in which fuel mitigation tactics (e.g., fuel thinning, prescribed and cultural burning) may be particularly useful for protecting areas of high human or ecological value in the face of increasingly extreme climate conditions. Although our maps can help predict where and when fire refugia may form under provided climatic and environmental conditions, they do not reflect real-time conditions and are therefore not intended for risk assessment or for operational management.

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气候、地形还是燃料?加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省火灾避难所自上而下与自下而上的控制
在火灾范围内幸存的植被口袋被称为火灾避难所,是干扰后生态恢复的重要组成部分。了解不同景观和气候条件下火灾避难所驱动因素的相对影响可以帮助确定有利于其形成的区域。在20年(2000-2019)的时间里,我们研究了各种自上而下(气候)和自下而上(燃料、物理环境)的控制对加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省森林中21个独特的火灾制度单元的火灾避难所创造的作用。使用增强回归树模型来确定这些控制及其相关变量对火灾避难所的相对影响,并创建火灾避难所概率在一系列年度气候条件下的预测图。我们发现,自下而上的控制,特别是与物理环境有关的变量,通常对火灾避难所的产生影响最大,尽管与燃料有关的变量在北方和中部内陆地区更容易受到干扰的森林中更为重要。然而,这些自下而上的控制可能会被极端气候条件所淹没,极端气候条件对难民的影响因地区而异。持续(长期)火灾避难所的位置与地图上的原始森林之间总体上呈正相关,这表明在多次火灾事件的过程中,强大的静态地形特征可能会庇护一些森林,从而允许原始林分的发展。我们的结论是,虽然强烈的地形特征赋予了该省某些地区最强有力的保护措施,但在许多地区,面对日益极端的气候条件,燃料缓解策略(例如燃料稀释、规定和文化燃烧)可能对保护具有高人类或生态价值的地区特别有用。虽然我们的地图可以帮助预测在特定的气候和环境条件下何时何地可能形成火灾避难所,但它们并不能反映实时情况,因此不适用于风险评估或操作管理。
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来源期刊
Ecosphere
Ecosphere ECOLOGY-
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
3.70%
发文量
378
审稿时长
15 weeks
期刊介绍: The scope of Ecosphere is as broad as the science of ecology itself. The journal welcomes submissions from all sub-disciplines of ecological science, as well as interdisciplinary studies relating to ecology. The journal''s goal is to provide a rapid-publication, online-only, open-access alternative to ESA''s other journals, while maintaining the rigorous standards of peer review for which ESA publications are renowned.
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