UNDERSTANDING CLIMATIC FACTORS DRIVING WILDFIRES IN THE WESTERN U.S.
Files
Publication or External Link
Date
Authors
Advisor
Citation
DRUM DOI
Abstract
Wildfires have profound and catastrophic impacts on landscapes and human society and act as important agents in the transformation of ecosystems. Over the past decades, the western United States (WUS) has experienced a significant increase of large wildfires, with substantial rise of the economic and ecological costs. Considerable research efforts towards understanding climate change as a primary driver of larger and more severe wildfires, which exacerbates summer drought, reduces spring snowpack, etc. However, the physical relationships among wildfires in North America (NA) and regional feedback processes to changes in the large-scale circulation, global dryness, and linkages to global warming are still poorly understood. Our observational analyses of wildfire-climate relationships in North America were conducted using diverse independent observations and reanalysis data sets for the period 1984–2014. Results show that the WUS has experienced the most robust increase in burned area. In addition to warming, the WUS has been under the influence of multi-decadal trends in tropospheric relative humidity deficit, reduced cloudiness, increased surface net insolation, and enhanced adiabatic warming and drying from increased tropospheric subsidence, as well as drying from enhanced offshore low-level flow. These trends are found to be associated with a widening of the descending branch of the Hadley circulation, consistent with climate model projections under greenhouse gases warming. This work sheds new light on the underlying regional climate processes affecting wildfire trends in NA and linkages with climate change under global warming. My second work focuses on analyzing the causes of the exceptional 2020 fire season in the WUS. Our comprehensive examination shows this extraordinary year for fires in the WUS is the results of “perfect storm”, a combination of multiple climate and weather extremes events. Extreme fuel aridity in September serves as a compelling example of the critical significance of tropospheric subsidence to the surface and atmospheric RH deficit. The third study evaluates performance of the Canada and US fire indices over the various ecoregions of the WUS. My study also finds Haines index combined with current index further improves the performance of conditional frequency distribution and predictive skill of large fires, suggesting the importance and merit of input from atmosphere dryness and stability into current fire indices.