Climatic and Human Influences on Fire Regimes of the Southern San Juan Mountains, Colorado, USA

Fire severity, frequency, and extent are expected to change dramatically in coming decades in response to changing climatic conditions, superimposed on the adverse cumulative effects of various human-related disturbances on ecosystems during the past 100 years or more. To better gauge these expected...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ecology. - Duke University Press. - 85(2004), 6, Seite 1708-1724
1. Verfasser: Grissino-Mayer, Henri D. (VerfasserIn)
Weitere Verfasser: Romme, William H., Floyd, M. Lisa, Hanna, David D.
Format: Online-Aufsatz
Sprache:English
Veröffentlicht: 2004
Zugriff auf das übergeordnete Werk:Ecology
Schlagworte:Climate-Fire Interactions Dendrochronology Disturbances, Human Fire History Fire Regimes Mixed Conifer Ponderosa Pine San Juan Mountains, Colorado, USA Biological sciences Health sciences Physical sciences
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520 |a Fire severity, frequency, and extent are expected to change dramatically in coming decades in response to changing climatic conditions, superimposed on the adverse cumulative effects of various human-related disturbances on ecosystems during the past 100 years or more. To better gauge these expected changes, knowledge of climatic and human influences on past fire regimes is essential. We characterized the temporal and spatial properties of fire regimes in ponderosa pine forests of the southern San Juan Mountains of southwestern Colorado by collecting 175 fire-scarred tree samples from nine sites across a wide range of topographic settings. All tree rings and fire scars were dated using standard dendrochronological techniques. Fire-free intervals were statistically modeled using the Weibull distribution to provide quantitative measures that characterized the historical range of variation in pre-EuroAmerican fire regimes. Fires during our reference period were more frequent in the low elevation ponderosa pine forests (6-10 yr) than in the high elevation, mixed conifer forests (18-28 yr). Fires at lower elevations were predominantly low-severity, isolated fires. Fires during some years (e.g., 1748) were spatially extensive throughout the entire mountain range. Intervals that delimited significantly long fire-free periods ranged from 10-19 yr (low elevation) to 27-50 yr (high elevation). Fire histories were similar between the eastern and western portions of the mountain range, although we found significant evidence of topographic isolation on fire regimes at one site. Pre-1880 fires primarily occurred in the dormant season, and we found no temporal changes in past fire seasonality. We found no compelling evidence that Native Americans influenced fire regimes in our study sites. We found a hiatus in fire occurrence between 1750 and 1770 that we believe was likely related to weakened El Niño-Southern Oscillation activity, an extended series of cool-phase Pacific Decadal Oscillation events, and weakened monsoonal moisture, all possibly entrained in an invasive air mass typical of locations that are more northerly. In addition, pre-1880 fires occurred during years of severe drought, conditioned by above average moisture conditions in preceding years. The 20th century is characterized by a near complete absence of fires (fire-free interval of >100 yr), suggesting future wildfires may be more widespread and ecologically severe compared to pre-1880 fires. 
540 |a Copyright 2004 Ecological Society of America 
650 4 |a Climate-Fire Interactions 
650 4 |a Dendrochronology 
650 4 |a Disturbances, Human 
650 4 |a Fire History 
650 4 |a Fire Regimes 
650 4 |a Mixed Conifer 
650 4 |a Ponderosa Pine 
650 4 |a San Juan Mountains, Colorado, USA 
650 4 |a Biological sciences  |x Ecology  |x Fire ecology  |x Fire regimes 
650 4 |a Health sciences  |x Health and wellness  |x Public health  |x Disasters  |x Fires  |x Wildfires  |x Forest fires 
650 4 |a Biological sciences  |x Biology  |x Botany  |x Dendrology  |x Trees  |x Evergreen trees  |x Conifers  |x Pine trees 
650 4 |a Physical sciences  |x Earth sciences  |x Geography  |x Geomorphology  |x Topography  |x Topographical elevation 
650 4 |a Biological sciences  |x Ecology  |x Population ecology  |x Synecology  |x Biocenosis  |x Plant communities  |x Forests  |x Coniferous forests 
650 4 |a Biological sciences  |x Ecology  |x Fire ecology 
650 4 |a Biological sciences  |x Biology  |x Botany  |x Plant physiology  |x Vascular tissues  |x Xylem  |x Secondary xylem  |x Wood  |x Wood structure  |x Growth rings 
650 4 |a Biological sciences  |x Biology  |x Botany  |x Plant physiology  |x Plant response  |x Fire scars 
650 4 |a Biological sciences  |x Biology  |x Botany  |x Plant ecology  |x Forest ecology 
650 4 |a Health sciences  |x Health and wellness  |x Public health  |x Disasters  |x Fires  |x Wildfires  |x Wildfire seasons 
655 4 |a research-article 
700 1 |a Romme, William H.  |e verfasserin  |4 aut 
700 1 |a Floyd, M. Lisa  |e verfasserin  |4 aut 
700 1 |a Hanna, David D.  |e verfasserin  |4 aut 
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952 |d 85  |j 2004  |e 6  |h 1708-1724