Using Climate-Fire Analog Mapping to Inform Climate Change Adaptation Strategies for Wildland Fire in Protected Areas of the Conterminous U.S.

Adam Terando, Peng Gao, John A. Kupfer, Kevin S. Young, J. Kevin Hiers
Posted on: 8/16/2024 - Updated on: 8/16/2024

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CAKE Team

Published

Abstract

Potential changes in wildland fire regimes due to anthropogenic climate change can be projected using data from climate models, but directly applying these meteorological variables to long-term planning and adaptive management activities may be difficult for decision makers. Analog mapping, in contrast, creates more intuitive assessments of changing fire regimes that also recognize the complex, multivariate, and multi-scalar nature of ecosystems. 

Here, we use data from 20 downscaled climate models under two climate forcing scenarios, Representative Concentration Pathways (RCP 4.5 and 8.5), to identify and map future climate-fire analogs for 655 protected areas in the conterminous U.S. based on annual temperature, cumulative precipitation amount and seasonality, and fire regime potentials derived from a simple process-based fire frequency model. Patterns of analogs were heavily influenced by gradients in latitude and topography, with longer time frames (end-of-century conditions) and the more extreme climate forcing scenario resulting in greater analog distances and more ensemble entropy (i.e., less consensus among climate models regarding the closest analog for a given management unit). 

Finer scale analyses for three protected areas (Yellowstone and Great Smoky Mountains National Parks, White Mountain National Forest) illustrate how climate-fire analog mapping can improve insight into the types of ecosystem responses that might occur under similar management conditions. Federally protected areas such as national parks, forests, and wildlife refuges have long served as reference sites for the study of fire regimes, a role that is likely to continue because many of these units are managed to allow at least some ecosystem processes to operate independently. 

The results suggest that analog mapping approaches are well-suited as part of qualitative assessments within climate- and fire-aware adaptive management processes. The use of analogs to depict relatable, real-world depictions of possible ecosystem changes in a given place, can help managers make more strategic choices about when and where to resist, accept, or direct climate change-driven ecological change.

Highlights:

  • Analog analyses can provide more intuitive assessments of climatic change for decision makers, managers, and society.
  • The potential for increased wildfire frequency, severity, and extent is one of the primary climate change risks in the U.S.
  • We use a process-based model, PC2FM, to derive projected analog fire regimes with respect to potential fire probability.
  • The results can complement adaptation tools used to respond to changing fire regimes and associated ecosystem responses.

 

 

Citation

Terando, A., Gao, P., Kupfer, J.A., Young, K.S., Hiers, J.K. (2024). Using climate-fire analog mapping to inform climate change adaptation strategies for wildland fire in protected areas of the conterminous U.S. Global Environmental Change Advances, 2: 100007. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gecadv.2024.100007.

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