Fire History
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Fire history, the ecological science of studying the history of wildfires, is a subdiscipline of
fire ecology Fire ecology is a scientific discipline concerned with the effects of fire on natural ecosystems. Many ecosystems, particularly prairie, savanna, chaparral and coniferous forests, have evolved with fire as an essential contributor to habitat vit ...
. Patterns of forest fires in historical and prehistorical times provide information relevant to the vegetation pattern in modern landscapes. It gives an estimate of a natural disturbance regime's historical range of variability and can be used to identify the processes affecting fire occurrence. Fire history reconstructions are achieved by compiling atlases of past fires, using the
tree ring Dendrochronology (or tree-ring dating) is the scientific method of dating tree rings (also called growth rings) to the exact year they were formed in a tree. As well as dating them, this can give data for dendroclimatology, the study of climate ...
record from fire scars and tree ages and the charcoal record from soils and sediments.


Prehistoric fires

Sustained wildfire can only exist once oxygen levels and fuel sources are present in sufficient quantities. Between 400 and 450 million years ago, fire became a landscape feature. The presence of
fusain Fusain is a fossilised carbon deposit which, after some controversy, has been identified as fossilised charcoal. It is fibrous, black and opaque, and often preserves details of cell wall architecture. Wood-derived fusain usually takes the form ...
(fossil charcoal), beginning in the early
Carboniferous The Carboniferous ( ) is a Geologic time scale, geologic period and System (stratigraphy), system of the Paleozoic era (geology), era that spans 60 million years, from the end of the Devonian Period Ma (million years ago) to the beginning of the ...
attests to this fire history and forms an important element of the
Cretaceous–Paleogene boundary The Cretaceous–Paleogene (K–Pg) boundary, formerly known as the Cretaceous–Tertiary (K–T) boundary, is a geological signature, usually a thin band of rock containing much more iridium than other bands. The K–Pg boundary marks the end o ...
.


Mapped data


Tree-ring data

The growth record of a tree in seasonal climates is preserved in the growth rings in the stem wood; the field of
dendrochronology Dendrochronology (or tree-ring dating) is the scientific method of chronological dating, dating tree rings (also called growth rings) to the exact year they were formed in a tree. As well as dating them, this can give data for dendroclimatology, ...
is the study of the record of climate and other events preserved in the growth record. Each growth ring represents one year of life. The thickness of each ring indicates the amount of wood produced during that growing season. Large cells can quickly divide rapidly at the beginning of the growing season, creating a light-colored wood. When growth slows down, generally in colder months, a darker wood is created from smaller cells, dividing more slowly. Thus, one year is represented by a light inner ring and a darker outer ring. Rings can be counted from dead trees and stumps left behind from logging. A sample can be collected from a living tree using tools like the
increment borer Increment or incremental may refer to: *Incrementalism, a theory (also used in politics as a synonym for gradualism) * Increment and decrement operators, the operators ++ and -- in computer programming * Incremental computing * Incremental backup ...
. The increment borer is a hollow steel tube that extracts a core sample from a tree’s trunk. The growth rings in a core sample are counted to determine the age of that tree. The ages of stand-replacing fires may be determined by determining the cohort age of trees established after a fire. For example, tree-ring dating of large stands will show the age of the forest and may provide an estimate of when the last significant disturbance event occurred. Sometimes, growth rings exhibit scars. A fire scar forms when heat kills the vascular cambium beneath the bark, which then heals over subsequent years as growth rings curl over the scarred area, thus protecting the tree from infection. This method can be used to date the year a fire occurred. Observing the scars establishes the timeline of a forest fire and the time between fires at a site. Surveying many trees over a large sample area provides a view to individual fire events and the overall fire regime. Not all tree species scar and show evidence of fire. Most pine species in the subgenus
Pinus A pine is any conifer tree or shrub in the genus ''Pinus'' () of the family Pinaceae. ''Pinus'' is the sole genus in the subfamily Pinoideae. ''World Flora Online'' accepts 134 species-rank taxa (119 species and 15 nothospecies) of pines as c ...
readily produce scars protected by resin; scarring on other trees may result in death, leaving no fire record behind.


Research and data examples

Before Euro-American settlement in western North America, fire histories from scars preserved in ponderosa pine forests often reveal a pattern of frequent fire (often with 5 to 20-year intervals in a single area), with a pattern in time and space strongly related to past variations in climate. Fuel reduction from grazing and fire suppression significantly reduced the amount of fire in dry forests over the last 100 years. A study by Arne Buechiling and William L. Baker in 2004 identified 41 fire events beginning in 1533 in a 9200-ha study area north of Estes Park, Colorado. They sampled 3461 tree cores and 212 fire scars. Fire scar data provided greater insight into the fire event parameters. Of the 41 fires, 22 were high-severity crown fires, seven low-severity surface fires, and eight mixed-severity fires. Fires larger than 300 ha were few but composed a substantial proportion of the area burned since 1700. Drought periods produced larger fires. There is little known about the history of fires in some places. Central Europe, for instance, lacks intact forests with old-growth trees or an abundance of dead or cut-down trees that can be used to reconstruct past fire regimes. The Bialowieza Primeval Forest in Poland is an exception to this condition. A group of researchers were able to use a 350-year tree-ring fire record to reconstruct the fire history in precise detail. This is a shining example of how the method can be used in a place with a lost or no written history of a fire regime.


See also

*
Fire ecology Fire ecology is a scientific discipline concerned with the effects of fire on natural ecosystems. Many ecosystems, particularly prairie, savanna, chaparral and coniferous forests, have evolved with fire as an essential contributor to habitat vit ...
*
Pyrogeography Pyrogeography is the study of the past, present, and projected distribution of wildfire. Wildland fire occurs under certain conditions of climate, vegetation, topography, and sources of ignition, such that it has its own biogeography, or pattern i ...
*
Fossil record of fire The fossil record of fire first appears with the establishment of a land-based flora in the Middle Ordovician period, , permitting the accumulation of oxygen in the atmosphere as never before, as the new hordes of land plants pumped it out as a ...


References


Further reading

* Bond, William J., and Jon E. Keeley. "Fire as a global ‘herbivore’: the ecology and evolution of flammable ecosystems." ''Trends in ecology & evolution'' 20.7 (2005): 387–394
online
* Bowman, David M.J.S. et al. "The human dimension of fire regimes on Earth." ''Journal of biogeography'' 38.12 (2011): 2223–2236
online
* Iglesias, Virginia, et al. "Fires that matter: reconceptualizing fire risk to include interactions between humans and the natural environment." ''Environmental Research'' Letters 17.4 (2022): 045014
online
* Moore, Peter F. "Global wildland fire management research needs." ''Current Forestry Reports'' 5 (2019): 210–225. * Pyne, Stephen J. ''Fire : a brief history'' (University of Washington Press, 2001). ** Pyne, Stephen J. 'World fire : the culture of fire on earth'' (1995
online
** Pyne, Stephen J. ''Tending fire : coping with America's wildland fires'' (2004
online
** Pyne, Stephen J. ''Awful splendour : a fire history of Canada'' (2007
online
** Pyne, Stephen J. ''Burning bush : a fire history of Australia'' (1991
online
** Pyne, Stephen J. ''Between Two Fires: A Fire History of Contemporary America'' (2015) ** Pyne, Stephen J. ''California: A Fire Survey '' (2016) * Safford, Hugh D., et al. "Fire ecology of the North American Mediterranean-climate zone." in ''Fire ecology and management: Past, present, and future of US forested ecosystems'' (2021): 337–392. re California and its neighbor
online
{cbignore, bot=medic * Twidwell, Dirac, et al. "Advancing fire ecology in 21st century rangelands." ''Rangeland Ecology & Management'' 78 (2021): 201–212
online


External links


Rebecca Falconer, "Study: Climate change main cause of wildfire weather in U.S. West" ''Energy & Environment'' (Nov 1, 2021)
Ecological succession Fire Landscape ecology