Abstract

AbstractLittle is known regarding the fire history of high‐latitude coastal temperate rain forests in the Pacific Northwest (PNW) of North America. While reconstructing historical fire regimes typically requires dendrochronological records from fire‐scarred trees or stratigraphically preserved lake sediment data, this type of information is virtually non‐existent in this region. To describe the long‐term fire history of a site on the central coast of British Columbia, Canada, we radiocarbon‐dated 52 pieces of charcoal. Charcoal ages ranged from 12,670 to 70 yr BP. Fires occurred regularly since 12,670 yr BP, with the exception of a distinct fire‐free period at 7500–5500 yr BP. Time since fire (TSF) estimates from soil charcoal and fire‐scarred trees ranged from 12,670 to 100 yr BP (median = 327 yr), and 70% of the sites examined had burned within the past 1000 yr. An increase in fire frequency in the late Holocene is consistent with the widely held hypothesis that anthropogenic fires were common across the PNW. We evaluate TSF distributions and discuss the difficulties in assigning actual fire dates from charcoal fragments with large inbuilt ages in a coastal temperate rain forest setting. We determine that a comprehensive approach using soil charcoal and fire scar analyses is necessary to reconstruct general trends in fire activity throughout the Holocene in this region.

Highlights

  • Coastal temperate rain forests in the Pacific Northwest (PNW) of North America are believed to have a very low frequency of forest fires, reflecting their location in one of the wettest biomes on Earth (Veblen and Alaback 1996)

  • Our analyses of soil charcoal and fire scars from four vegetation types confirm that fire has been a feature of this landscape for millennia

  • Because 23% of our samples recorded fires in the 12,700–7500 yr BP period, we can be confident that our interpretation of temporal trends in fire activity is not limited by a decrease in the number of samples through time (Gavin 2003)

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Summary

Introduction

Coastal temperate rain forests in the Pacific Northwest (PNW) of North America are believed to have a very low frequency of forest fires, reflecting their location in one of the wettest biomes on Earth (Veblen and Alaback 1996). This low forest fire activity is typically attributed to the high amounts of precipitation and to the rarity of lightning in these settings (McWethy et al 2013). Nor is there a long-t­erm perspective on how these fire regimes may have been altered as a result of cultural changes related to European contact and 20th-c­ entury policies of fire suppression (Lepofsky et al 2005)

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