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Detecting the Effect of Climate Change on Canadian Forest Fires

Summary/Abstract

The area burned by forest fires in Canada has increased over the past four decades, at the same time as summer season temperatures have warmed. Here we use output from a coupled climate model to demonstrate that human emissions of greenhouse gases and sulfate aerosol have made a detectable contribution to this warming. We further show that human‐induced climate change has had a detectable influence on the area burned by forest fire in Canada over recent decades. This increase in area burned is likely to have important implications for terrestrial emissions of carbon dioxide and for forest ecosystems.

N.P. Gillett et al., Detecting the Effect of Climate Change on Canadian Forest Fires, 31 GEOPHYSICAL RES. LETTERS 1, 1 (2004)

Link to Full Report
September 2004
N. P. Gillett, A. J. Weaver, F. W. Zwiers, M. D. Flannigan.
Geophysical Research Letters
Synthesis Report
Canada, North America
Climate Change Attribution
Climate Change Attribution → Cross-cutting Research
Impact Attribution → Wildfires

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