Abstract

Abstract. Recent climate changes have increased fire-prone weather conditions in many regions and have likely affected fire occurrence, which might impact ecosystem functioning, biogeochemical cycles, and society. Prediction of how fire impacts may change in the future is difficult because of the complexity of the controls on fire occurrence and burned area. Here we aim to assess how process-based fire-enabled dynamic global vegetation models (DGVMs) represent relationships between controlling factors and burned area. We developed a pattern-oriented model evaluation approach using the random forest (RF) algorithm to identify emergent relationships between climate, vegetation, and socio-economic predictor variables and burned area. We applied this approach to monthly burned area time series for the period from 2005 to 2011 from satellite observations and from DGVMs from the “Fire Modeling Intercomparison Project” (FireMIP) that were run using a common protocol and forcing data sets. The satellite-derived relationships indicate strong sensitivity to climate variables (e.g. maximum temperature, number of wet days), vegetation properties (e.g. vegetation type, previous-season plant productivity and leaf area, woody litter), and to socio-economic variables (e.g. human population density). DGVMs broadly reproduce the relationships with climate variables and, for some models, with population density. Interestingly, satellite-derived responses show a strong increase in burned area with an increase in previous-season leaf area index and plant productivity in most fire-prone ecosystems, which was largely underestimated by most DGVMs. Hence, our pattern-oriented model evaluation approach allowed us to diagnose that vegetation effects on fire are a main deficiency regarding fire-enabled dynamic global vegetation models' ability to accurately simulate the role of fire under global environmental change.

Highlights

  • About 3 % of the global land area burns every year (Chuvieco et al, 2016; Giglio et al, 2013; Randerson et al, 2012)

  • The third set of random forest (RF) models was derived for each Fire Modeling Intercomparison Project” (FireMIP) model using the simulated burned area as the target variable and simulations of gross primary production, biomass and land cover predictor variables, and the population density and climate predictor variables that were used as inputs for the models

  • We evaluated the temporal agreement of monthly burned area time series for 2005–2011 between the data sets and between the data sets and the fire-enabled dynamic global vegetation models (DGVMs) based on various model performance metrics (Janssen and Heuberger, 1995) on a per-grid cell basis

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Summary

Introduction

About 3 % of the global land area burns every year (Chuvieco et al, 2016; Giglio et al, 2013; Randerson et al, 2012). Fire represents a strong control on large-scale vegetation patterns and structure (Bond et al, 2004) and can significantly accelerate the impacts of changing climate or land management on global ecosystems (Aragão et al, 2018; Beck et al, 2011). Climate influences the nature and availability of fuel, through its impact on vegetation productivity and structure (Harrison et al, 2010). Vegetation structure, in turn, influences the patterns of available fuel and moisture that directly determine fire spread, severity, and extent (Krawchuk and Moritz, 2011; Pausas and Ribeiro, 2013). There is even greater uncertainty about the potential trajectory of changes in fire regimes in the future (Settele et al, 2014)

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