fire – climate relations in the western sierra nevada tom swetnam & chris baisan

22
Fire – Climate Relations in the Western Sierra Nevada Tom Swetnam & Chris Baisan

Upload: shawn-york

Post on 27-Dec-2015

220 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Fire – Climate Relations in the Western Sierra Nevada Tom Swetnam & Chris Baisan

Fire – Climate Relations in the Western Sierra Nevada

Tom Swetnam & Chris Baisan

Page 2: Fire – Climate Relations in the Western Sierra Nevada Tom Swetnam & Chris Baisan

Colony Mill, Giant Forest

Tree sampled for fire history in 1992Open pine stand

Page 3: Fire – Climate Relations in the Western Sierra Nevada Tom Swetnam & Chris Baisan
Page 4: Fire – Climate Relations in the Western Sierra Nevada Tom Swetnam & Chris Baisan

Giant Forest plots

Page 5: Fire – Climate Relations in the Western Sierra Nevada Tom Swetnam & Chris Baisan

Vegetation, species composition plot data:

Compare pre-settlement compositionestimates with current stand composition.

Relate pre (and post) settlement compositionwith fire regime characteristics among and betweenplots, sites, and transects.

High variability in forest composition between plots

Estimates of b.a. increase from pre-settlement conditionvaried from 0 to 100%. Average increase ~50%.

Giant sequoia fire record in the Circle Meadow areanow extended back prior to ~600BC with some replication.

Page 6: Fire – Climate Relations in the Western Sierra Nevada Tom Swetnam & Chris Baisan

CEMO (0.15%)

CADE (42.46%)

PIPO (22.69%)PSME (2.48%)

QUCH (12.38%)QUKE (19.84%)

HEL Post83m2/ha

CEMO (0.25%)CADE (15.32%)

PIPO (27.77%)

PSME (2.25%)QUCH (20.90%)

QUKE (33.50%)

HEL Pre49.1m2/ha

Helispot fire history site

Elevation 1350m MFI ~6yrs

Plot species composition

Page 7: Fire – Climate Relations in the Western Sierra Nevada Tom Swetnam & Chris Baisan

-1600 -1400 -1200 -1000 -800 -600 -400 -200 0 200 400

CCW 01

CCW 02

CCW 03

CCW 04

CCW 05

LIN 01

CM N 07

CM C 08

CM C 03

G ia nt Fo re st fire -sc a rre d tre e s

Page 8: Fire – Climate Relations in the Western Sierra Nevada Tom Swetnam & Chris Baisan

1

3

4

1. East Cascades, 2 watersheds, 723 trees, Everett et al. 1999, For. Ecol. & Manage., In press.

2. Blue Mountains, 4 watersheds, 628 trees, Heyerdahl 1998 PhD diss., Univ. Wash.

3. West Slope Sierra Nevada, 4 elevational transects, 49 sites, 446 trees, Swetnam & Baisan, In Press.

4. Southwestern US, 63 sites, 1,215 trees, Swetnam and Baisan 1996, USFS RM-GTR-286:11-32.

2

Four Fire-Scar Networks in Western U.S

Page 9: Fire – Climate Relations in the Western Sierra Nevada Tom Swetnam & Chris Baisan
Page 10: Fire – Climate Relations in the Western Sierra Nevada Tom Swetnam & Chris Baisan
Page 11: Fire – Climate Relations in the Western Sierra Nevada Tom Swetnam & Chris Baisan

Paleo-Fire History Databases – in construction

Page 12: Fire – Climate Relations in the Western Sierra Nevada Tom Swetnam & Chris Baisan

A. L. Westerling, T. J. Brown, A. Gershunov, D. R. Cayan, and M. D. Dettinger. Long lead statistical forecasts of area burned in western U.S. wildfires by ecosystem province. International Journal of Wildland Fire 11:257-266. 2002

Page 13: Fire – Climate Relations in the Western Sierra Nevada Tom Swetnam & Chris Baisan

Year

1860 1880 1900 1920 1940 1960 1980-2

0

2

4

6

1700 1720 1740 1760 1780 1800 1820 1840

Sta

ndar

d D

evia

tion

Uni

ts

-2

0

2

4

6 12.3

8.2Observed AreaBurned

Statistical Reconstructionof Area Burned

Fire-Scar Reconstructionof Area Burned

Page 14: Fire – Climate Relations in the Western Sierra Nevada Tom Swetnam & Chris Baisan

Composite fire scar chronologies from 10 forest stands

In the Jemez Mountains, New Mexico

Page 15: Fire – Climate Relations in the Western Sierra Nevada Tom Swetnam & Chris Baisan

Fire-scar chronology from Santa Catalina Mountains, Arizona

Page 16: Fire – Climate Relations in the Western Sierra Nevada Tom Swetnam & Chris Baisan

Fire-scar chronology from Gila Wilderness, in Southwestern New Mexico.

Swetnam and Baisan. In press. Fire and climate history in the Sierra Nevada, California and Southwestern US, Veblen et al., Fire and Climate in the Western Americas, Springer-Verlag, Ecol. Studies Series.

Page 17: Fire – Climate Relations in the Western Sierra Nevada Tom Swetnam & Chris Baisan

Fire-scar chronology from Sierra San Pedro Martir

from Stephens, Skinner and Gill, in review.

Page 18: Fire – Climate Relations in the Western Sierra Nevada Tom Swetnam & Chris Baisan
Page 19: Fire – Climate Relations in the Western Sierra Nevada Tom Swetnam & Chris Baisan
Page 20: Fire – Climate Relations in the Western Sierra Nevada Tom Swetnam & Chris Baisan

Crown King, AZ August 19, 2002; Joel McMillan

Page 21: Fire – Climate Relations in the Western Sierra Nevada Tom Swetnam & Chris Baisan
Page 22: Fire – Climate Relations in the Western Sierra Nevada Tom Swetnam & Chris Baisan

Dead and dying trees from a combination of drought stress and bark beetle attack. Area affected is now > 500,000 acres.

This may become one the largest bark beetle outbreaks in recorded history in North America.Data from USDA FS Forest Health Protection, Arizona Zone, Entomology & Pathology group.