Unknown

Dataset Information

0

Shifting social-ecological fire regimes explain increasing structure loss from Western wildfires.


ABSTRACT: Structure loss is an acute, costly impact of the wildfire crisis in the western conterminous United States ("West"), motivating the need to understand recent trends and causes. We document a 246% rise in West-wide structure loss from wildfires between 1999-2009 and 2010-2020, driven strongly by events in 2017, 2018, and 2020. Increased structure loss was not due to increased area burned alone. Wildfires became significantly more destructive, with a 160% higher structure-loss rate (loss/kha burned) over the past decade. Structure loss was driven primarily by wildfires from unplanned human-related ignitions (e.g. backyard burning, power lines, etc.), which accounted for 76% of all structure loss and resulted in 10 times more structures destroyed per unit area burned compared with lightning-ignited fires. Annual structure loss was well explained by area burned from human-related ignitions, while decadal structure loss was explained by state-level structure abundance in flammable vegetation. Both predictors increased over recent decades and likely interacted with increased fuel aridity to drive structure-loss trends. While states are diverse in patterns and trends, nearly all experienced more burning from human-related ignitions and/or higher structure-loss rates, particularly California, Washington, and Oregon. Our findings highlight how fire regimes-characteristics of fire over space and time-are fundamentally social-ecological phenomena. By resolving the diversity of Western fire regimes, our work informs regionally appropriate mitigation and adaptation strategies. With millions of structures with high fire risk, reducing human-related ignitions and rethinking how we build are critical for preventing future wildfire disasters.

SUBMITTER: Higuera PE 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC10019760 | biostudies-literature | 2023 Mar

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

altmetric image

Publications

Shifting social-ecological fire regimes explain increasing structure loss from Western wildfires.

Higuera Philip E PE   Cook Maxwell C MC   Balch Jennifer K JK   Stavros E Natasha EN   Mahood Adam L AL   St Denis Lise A LA  

PNAS nexus 20230201 3


Structure loss is an acute, costly impact of the wildfire crisis in the western conterminous United States ("West"), motivating the need to understand recent trends and causes. We document a 246% rise in West-wide structure loss from wildfires between 1999-2009 and 2010-2020, driven strongly by events in 2017, 2018, and 2020. Increased structure loss was not due to increased area burned alone. Wildfires became significantly more destructive, with a 160% higher structure-loss rate (loss/kha burne  ...[more]

Similar Datasets

| S-EPMC11067043 | biostudies-literature
| S-EPMC8617226 | biostudies-literature
| S-EPMC8548308 | biostudies-literature
| S-EPMC4605733 | biostudies-literature
| S-EPMC9285092 | biostudies-literature
| S-EPMC8087797 | biostudies-literature
| S-EPMC3912150 | biostudies-literature
| S-EPMC5358354 | biostudies-other
| S-EPMC6884633 | biostudies-literature
| S-EPMC11910340 | biostudies-literature