Effect of climate change on wildfires in Fennoscandia

crossref(2021)

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摘要
<p>The climate in the Boreal area is warming at a pace that is exceeding the global average. Both temperature and precipitation is projected to increase due to climate change. The gross primary production in the forested area is also projected to increase, as well as the soil respiration. The burned area is sensitive to the meteorological forcing and the risk of ignition depends on the amount and properties of the litter. Overall climate change has a potential to increase the fire risk in the Boreal forests.</p><p>The effects of projected climate change on forest fires in Fennoscandia, and in parts of Russia adjacent to Finland, were simulated with the JSBACH-SPITFIRE. JSBACH is the land model in the Earth system models of the Max-Planck Institute for Meteorology. SPITFIRE is a mechanistic fire model, driven by meteorology, vegetation cover, fuel load and fuel properties. The model simulates fire risk, number of fires and burned area fraction. SPITFIRE uses ignition rates and distinguishes between ignition events caused by lightning and humans. Ignition events result in fire only when enough fuel is present, and the fuel is sufficiently dry. The JSBACH-SPITFIRE model was driven by downscaled and bias corrected meteorological data from the EURO-CORDEX initiative, for the period from 1951 to 2100. The model domain was the land area within 55-71&#176;N and 5-38&#176;E. A subset of the EUR-44 domain was regridded to 0.5&#176; resolution for our model domain. The global driving models used for producing the EURO-CORDEX data used here were CanESM2, CNRM-CM5, MIROC5. We selected driver models that represent mid-range regarding the projected change in temperature and precipitation for Finland under RCP4.5 and RCP8.5. We used daily bias corrected data of precipitation and temperature from 1951 to 2100 for both RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 climate change projections. In addition, daily data of relative humidity, wind speed, longwave and shortwave radiation were used for the historical (1951-2005) and scenario period (2006-2100).</p><p>Preliminary results indicate that the increase in temperature, which affects the drying rate of the fuel, is the major factor for driving the changes in forest fires in the simulations.</p>
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