31 July 2007
Wildfires cause hundreds of millions of dollars in damage every year. The amount of destruction has grown over the past 2 decades, especially in the western United States.
What is a Wildfire?
Wildfire is one of the most destructive natural forces known to mankind. While sometimes caused by lightning, nine out of ten wildfires are human-caused. Put simply, "wildfire" is the term applied to any unwanted and unplanned fire burning in forest, shrub or grass.
The current increase in instances of wildfire can be explained by four key factors:
1-Past fire suppression policies, including one of "total of suppression", which allowed for the accumulation of fuel in the form fallen leaves, branches, and excessive plant overgrowth in forest and wild land areas.
2- Increasingly dry, hot weather.
3- Changing weather patterns across the USA.
4- Increased residential development in the wild land/urban interface.
To understand better why the northern Rocky Mountains region has been hit especially hard by wildfires, scientists from the University of Arizona in Tucson looked at weather, snow, and fire records from 1970 to 2003.
Their study showed that, between 1987 and 2003, fires burned an area 6.5 times larger than the area burned between 1970 and 1986. The fire season also started earlier, and its average length increased by 78 days.
Warmer spring and summer temperatures appear to be part of the explanation for this change. The average temperature in the study's more recent period was 0.87°C higher than it was in the earlier period; and this trend is likely to continue. Experts predict that average summer temperatures may rise between 2°C and 5°C by the year 2050 in western North America.
The timing of snowmelt appears to be another cause of the fire boom. When snow melts early in the season, forests become drier through the summer and catch fire and burn more easily. Western snow packs now typically melt a week to a month earlier than they did 50 years ago, according to recent studies.
Some people have blamed the growing fire risk on policies that allow brush and branches to build up on forest floors. But clearing brush by itself won't help much if changes in climate are largely responsible for increasingly severe forest fires.
Controlling today's forest fires could mitigate tomorrow's fire threat, because trees absorb atmosphere-warming carbon dioxide, she says. "If we can keep the trees on the stump, then [they're] sponging up carbon from the atmosphere."
References:
http://www.smokeybear.com/wildfire-science.asp
http://www.sciencenewsforkids.org/articles/20060726/Note2.asp
http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20060708/fob1.asp
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