High-resolution records detect human-caused changes to the boreal forest wildfire regime in interior Alaska

Author:

Gaglioti Benjamin V12,Mann Daniel H3,Jones Benjamin M2,Wooller Matthew J14,Finney Bruce P5

Affiliation:

1. Water and Environmental Research Center, University of Alaska Fairbanks, USA

2. Alaska Science Center, US Geological Survey, USA

3. Department of Geosciences, University of Alaska Fairbanks, USA

4. School of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences, University of Alaska Fairbanks, USA

5. Department of Geosciences, Idaho State University, USA

Abstract

Stand-replacing wildfires are a keystone disturbance in the boreal forest, and they are becoming more common as the climate warms. Paleo-fire archives from the wildland–urban interface can quantify the prehistoric fire regime and assess how both human land-use and climate change impact ecosystem dynamics. Here, we use a combination of a sedimentary charcoal record preserved in varved lake sediments (annually layered) and fire scars in living trees to document changes in local fire return intervals (FRIs) and regional fire activity over the last 500 years. Ace Lake is within the boreal forest, located near the town of Fairbanks in interior Alaska, which was settled by gold miners in AD 1902. In the 400 years before settlement, fires occurred near the lake on average every 58 years. After settlement, fires became much more frequent (average every 18 years), and background charcoal flux rates rose to four times their preindustrial levels, indicating a region-wide increase in burning. Despite this surge in burning, the preindustrial boreal forest ecosystem and permafrost in the watershed have remained intact. Although fire suppression has reduced charcoal influx since the 1950s, an aging fuel load experiencing increasingly warm summers may pose management problems for this and other boreal sites that have similar land-use and fire histories. The large human-caused fire events that we identify can be used to test how increasingly common megafires may alter ecosystem dynamics in the future.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Paleontology,Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology,Archeology,Global and Planetary Change

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