Nonetheless, anomalously active fire seasons have also been observed in non-drought years. In this work, we investigated the impact of temperature on fires and found that when the July-October (JASO) period is anomalously dry, the sensitivity of fires to temperature is modest. In contrast, under normal-to-wet conditions, fire probability increases sharply when JASO is anomalously warm. This describes a regime in which an active fire season is not limited to drought years. Greater susceptibility to fires in response to a warmer environment finds support in the high evapotranspiration rates observed in normal-to-wet and warm conditions in Indonesia. We also find that fire probability in wet JASOs would be considerably less sensitive to temperature were not for the added effect of recent positive trends. Near-term regional climate projections reveal that, despite negligible changes in precipitation, a continuing warming trend will heighten fire probability over the next few decades especially in non-drought years. Mild fire seasons currently observed in association with wet conditions and cool temperatures will become rare events in Indonesia.
Download:
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/aa6884Dimensões Contagem de citações:
Ano de publicação
2017
Autores
Fernandes, K.; Verchot, L.V.; Baethgen, W.E.; Gutierrez-Velez, V.H.; Pinedo-Vasquez, M.; Martius, C.
Idioma
English
Palavras-chave
greenhouse gases, emissions, drought, fire
Geográfico
Indonesia