Using unplanned fires to help suppressing future large fires in Mediterranean forests

Author

Regos Sanz, Adrián

Aquilué, Núria

Retana, Javier

De Cáceres, Miquel

Brotons, Lluís

Publication date

2020-06-19T11:26:54Z

2020-06-19T11:26:54Z

2014-04-11



Abstract

Despite the huge resources invested in fire suppression, the impact of wildfires has considerably increased across the Mediterranean region since the second half of the 20th century. Modulating fire suppression efforts in mild weather conditions is an appealing but hotly-debated strategy to use unplanned fires and associated fuel reduction to create opportunities for suppression of large fires in future adverse weather conditions. Using a spatially-explicit fire–succession model developed for Catalonia (Spain), we assessed this opportunistic policy by using two fire suppression strategies that reproduce how firefighters in extreme weather conditions exploit previous fire scars as firefighting opportunities. We designed scenarios by combining different levels of fire suppression efficiency and climatic severity for a 50-year period (2000–2050). An opportunistic fire suppression policy induced large-scale changes in fire regimes and decreased the area burnt under extreme climate conditions, but only accounted for up to 18–22% of the area to be burnt in reference scenarios. The area suppressed in adverse years tended to increase in scenarios with increasing amounts of area burnt during years dominated by mild weather. Climate change had counterintuitive effects on opportunistic fire suppression strategies. Climate warming increased the incidence of large fires under uncontrolled conditions but also indirectly increased opportunities for enhanced fire suppression. Therefore, to shift fire suppression opportunities from adverse to mild years, we would require a disproportionately large amount of area burnt in mild years. We conclude that the strategic planning of fire suppression resources has the potential to become an important cost-effective fuel-reduction strategy at large spatial scale. We do however suggest that this strategy should probably be accompanied by other fuel-reduction treatments applied at broad scales if large-scale changes in fire regimes are to be achieved, especially in the wider context of climate change.


This study was supported by the research projects BIONOVEL (CGL2011-29539/BOS) and MONTES (CSD2008-00040) funded by the Spanish Ministry of Education and Science.

Document Type

Article
Published version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Fire suppression technology; Wildfires; Fire engineering; Climate change; Fuels; Forests; Pines; Summer

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Related items

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/MICINN//CGL2011-29539/ES/ASSESING THE IMPACT ON BIODIVERSITY OF UNCERTAIN AND NOVEL FUTURE LANDSCAPES UNDER DIFFERENT DRIVERS OF GLOBAL CHANGE IN A MEDITERRANEAN REGION/

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0094906

PLoS ONE, 2014, vol. 9, núm. 4, e94906

Rights

cc-by (c) Regos et al., 2014

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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