Abstract

AbstractWildfire ecosystems are thought to be self‐regulated through pattern–process interactions between ignition frequency and location, and patterns of burned and recovering vegetation. Yet, recent increases in the frequency of large wildfires call into question the application of self‐organization theory to landscape resilience. Topography represents a stable bottom‐up template upon which fire interacts as both a physical and an ecological process. However, it is unclear how topographic control changes geographically and across spatial scales. We analyzed fire perimeter and topography data from 16 Bailey ecoregions across the State of California to identify spatial correspondence between ecoregional fire event and topographic patch size distributions. We found both sets of distributions followed a power‐law form and were statistically similar across several orders of magnitude, for most ecoregions. As a direct test of topographic controls on fire event perimeters, we used a paired t‐test across ~11,000 fires to identify differences in topographic attributes at fire boundaries versus fire interiors. Statistical significance was determined using 500 iterations of a neutral landscape model. Level of topographic control varied significantly by ecoregion and across topographic features. For example, north–south aspect breaks, valley bottoms, and roads showed a consistently high degree of spatial control on wildfire perimeters. Topographic controls were most pronounced in mountainous ecoregions and were least influential in arid regions. Ridgetops provided a low‐level control across all ecoregions. Spatial control was strongest for small (100–102 ha) to medium (103–104 ha) fire sizes, suggesting that controls were scale‐dependent rather than scale‐invariant. Roads were the dominant control across all ecoregions; however, removing roads from the analyses had no significant effect on the overall role of topography on wildfire extinguishment in this analysis. This result suggested that certain topographic settings show strong spatial control on fire growth, despite the presence of roads. Our results support the observation that both bottom‐up and top‐down factors constrain fire sizes and that there are likely scaling regions within fire size distributions wherein the dominance of these spatial controls varies. Human influences on fire spread may either diminish or enhance the role of some bottom‐up and top‐down factors, adding further complexity.

Highlights

  • Wildfire is the dominant disturbance agent in most western U.S forests and rangelands

  • Correspondence between topographic and fire event patch size distributions (PSDs) was found across all ecoregions, but the spatial extent of these relationships varied by ecoregion and by topographic feature (Fig. 4)

  • We found that topography was an effective barrier to spread in many ecoregions, primarily for small- to medium-sized fires

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Summary

Introduction

Wildfire is the dominant disturbance agent in most western U.S forests and rangelands. Large deviations in vegetation patterns occurred after very large weather-driven fire events, but systems generally rebounded to prior ranges of seral stage and fuel conditions (Nonaka and Spies 2005), unless there was a significant long-term change in climatic forcing (Keane et al 2009). In this way, multi-scaled feedback—interacting with recurrent disturbances over space and time—resulted in fairly predictable ranges of vegetation succession and fuel conditions, which yielded self-regulating and self-organizing property of these systems

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