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Wildfire response to changing daily temperature extremes in California’s Sierra Nevada

Summary/Abstract

Burned area has increased across California, especially in the Sierra Nevada range. Recent fires there have had devastating social, economic, and ecosystem impacts. To understand the consequences of new extremes in fire weather, here we quantify the sensitivity of wildfire occurrence and burned area in the Sierra Nevada to daily meteorological variables during 2001–2020. We find that the likelihood of fire occurrence increases nonlinearly with daily temperature during summer, with a 1°C increase yielding a 19 to 22% increase in risk. Area burned has a similar, nonlinear sensitivity, with 1°C of warming yielding a 22 to 25% increase in risk. Solely considering changes in summer daily temperatures from climate model projections, we estimate that by the 2040s, fire number will increase by 51 ± 32%, and burned area will increase by 59 ± 33%. These trends highlight the threat posed to fire management by hotter and drier summers.

Gutierrez, Aurora A. et al. Wildfire response to changing daily temperature extremes in California’s Sierra Nevada. ScienceAdvances 7 (2021). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abe6417.

View Resource
November 2021
Aurora A. Gutierrez, Stijn Hantson, Baird Langenbrunner, Bin Chen, Yufang Jin, Michael L. Goulden, and James T. Randerson
ScienceAdvances
Peer-reviewed Study
California, North America, United States
Impact Attribution → Wildfires

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