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Fire History, Burn Severity and Monitoring

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Title: Fire History, Burn Severity and Monitoring


1
Fire History, Burn Severity and Monitoring
  • Arctic Network
  • Jennifer Allen / Chuck Racine / Brian Sorbel

2
Fire in the Arctic Network
  • 1,222,000 acres burned in the ARCN from
    1955-2004.
  • Fire occurrences vary between the parks and among
    years
  • Fire occurs in a variety of community types
  • Landscape and site changes

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Total acres burned by parks
12
Fire Statistics by Park
PARK Avg acres/yr Avg fires/yr Largest Fire Yr (acres)
BELA 5,911 0.73 1977
CAKR 87 0.10 1987
GAAR 6,402 2.92 1969
KOVA 4,126 1.18 1971
NOAT 8,413 2.43 1977
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Vegetation community types affected
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Burn Severity GIS Products
  • A more complete depiction of fires effect on a
    landscape
  • Captures the mosaic nature of burn scars
  • Applications
  • Updating fuel model and vegetation layers
  • Research and modeling

18
The Normalized Burn Ratio (NBR)
  • Developed by Carl Key (USGS) and Nate Benson (NPS
    FMPC)
  • Compares pre-fire and post-fire Landsat scenes to
    generate a continuous index of burn severity

Range (-1000 to 1000)
Delta NBR Prefire NBR Postfire NBR
Range (-2000 to 2000)
19
Landsat Pre and Postfire Views of the Herron
River Fire, DENA 2001
Pre-fire Landsat 7 6-23-01
Post-fire Landsat 7 6-17-02
20
Final Perimeter Delineation Landscape Level
Burn Severity Determination
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Field Verification through the Composite Burn
Index (CBI)
24
Burn severity Remote vs Ground Truth Boreal
Forests and Tundra
25
Burn severity mapping
  • Baseline information that can be used for
    management, monitoring, modeling and research.
  • The severity of fires plays a role in vegetation
    succession, permafrost degradation, nutrient
    cycling, and water quality parameters
  • Can also be used to assess the effects of climate
    changes over time.

26
VEGETATION CHANGE FOLLOWING A 1977 TUNDRA FIRE AT
BELA
  • Charles Racine
  • Randi Jandt
  • John Dennis
  • Randy Meyers

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Sites 1-5 Tussock-shrub tundra
Site 8 wet sedge
Sites 6-7 Dwarf shrub tundra
29
NIMROD HILL PROFILE
30
NIMROD HILL MONITORING TIMES
Fire
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1 year (July 20, 1978)
6 years (July 20, 1983)
24 years (Aug 12, 2001)
32
Site 3 - Footslope Tussock-Shrub Tundra
1978 (1 year)
1983 (6 years)
2001 (24 years)
33
FOOTSLOPE TUSSOCK TUNDRA CHANGE IN GROWTH FORMS
(A) Sites 1, 2, and 3 EVERGREEN SHRUB (Ledum)
INCREASE
(B) Sites 4 and 5 DECIDUOUS SHRUB (Salix and
Betula) INCREASE
34
Well-drained Backslope - Dwarf Shrub Tundra-
Sites 6-7
1973 Site 6
Site 6 Before Fire (1973)
1 Year After Fire (1978)
24 Years (2001)
6 Years (1983) Sedge Meadow
35
Well-drained Backslope - Dwarf Shrub Tundra Site
7
1 Year (1978)
2 Years (1979) Bryophyte
3 Years (1980)
6 Years (1983) Sedge Meadow
24 Years (2001)
36
Back slope Dwarf Tundra
Sites 6 and 7
37
BACKSLOPE DWARF SHRUB TUNDRA SPECIES CHANGES
38
ARCTIC TUNDRA FIRES
  • Fire produces rapid changes in physical, chemical
    and biological conditions (i.e. light, soil
    temp.and thaw, nutrients, species).
  • Changes depend on the severity and frequency of
    fire.
  • Other effects smoke and haze, thermokarst,
    reindeer, ORV impacts, suppression costs, fire
    lines

39
Conclusions
  • Tundra wildfire is a landscape-scale disturbance
    and driver in tussock and dwarf shrub tundra in
    NW Alaska.
  • Fire return interval at the regional scale is
    long (250-450 years)
  • Succession during past 25 years may interact with
    climate warming to accelerate change.
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