Litcius/Paper detail

Increasing forest fire emissions despite the decline in global burned area

Bo Zheng, Philippe Ciais, Frédéric Chevallier, Emilio Chuvieco, Yang Chen, Hui Yang

2021Science Advances323 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Satellites have detected a global decline in burned area of grassland, coincident with a small increase in burned forest area. These contrasting trends have been reported in earlier literature; however, less is known of their impacts on global fire emission trends due to the scarcity of direct observations. We use an atmospheric inversion system to show that global fire emissions have been stable or slightly decreasing despite the substantial decline in global burned area over the past two decades caused by the carbon dioxide emission increase from forest fires offsetting the decreasing emissions from grass and shrubland fires. Forest fires are larger carbon dioxide sources per unit area burned than grassland fires, with a slow or incomplete follow-up recovery—sometimes no recovery due to degradation and deforestation. With fires expanding over forest areas, the slow recovery of carbon dioxide uptake over burned forest lands weakens land sink capacity, implying positive feedback on climate change.

Topics & Concepts

Environmental scienceGrasslandShrublandCarbon sinkSink (geography)Deforestation (computer science)Carbon dioxideGlobal warmingClimate changeCarbon dioxide in Earth's atmosphereAgroforestryEnvironmental protectionGeographyEcologyEcosystemBiologyProgramming languageCartographyComputer scienceFire effects on ecosystemsAtmospheric and Environmental Gas DynamicsFlood Risk Assessment and Management