Abstract

Abstract. Modeling and assessing the factors that drive forest fire ignitions is critical for fire prevention and sustainable ecosystem management. In southern Europe, the anthropogenic component of wildland fire ignitions is especially relevant. In the Alps, however, the role of fire as a component of disturbance regimes in forest and grassland ecosystems is poorly known. The aim of this work is to model the probability of fire ignition for an Alpine region in Italy using a regional wildfire archive (1995–2009) and MaxEnt modeling. We analyzed separately (i) winter forest fires, (ii) winter fires on grasslands and fallow land, and (iii) summer fires. Predictors were related to morphology, climate, and land use; distance from infrastructures, number of farms, and number of grazing animals were used as proxies for the anthropogenic component. Collinearity among predictors was reduced by a principal component analysis. Regarding ignitions, 30 % occurred in agricultural areas and 24 % in forests. Ignitions peaked in the late winter–early spring. Negligence from agrosilvicultural activities was the main cause of ignition (64 %); lightning accounted for 9 % of causes across the study time frame, but increased from 6 to 10 % between the first and second period of analysis. Models for all groups of fire had a high goodness of fit (AUC 0.90–0.95). Temperature was proportional to the probability of ignition, and precipitation was inversely proportional. Proximity from infrastructures had an effect only on winter fires, while the density of grazing animals had a remarkably different effect on summer (positive correlation) and winter (negative) fires. Implications are discussed regarding climate change, fire regime changes, and silvicultural prevention. Such a spatially explicit approach allows us to carry out spatially targeted fire management strategies and may assist in developing better fire management plans.

Highlights

  • Wildland fires drive the dynamics of vegetation in many parts of the world (Thonicke et al, 2001; Bond and Keeley, 2005), shaping landscape patterns and influencing the provision of productive and regulatory ecosystem services (Cannon, 2001; Conedera et al, 2003)

  • In a context of changing anthropogenic and natural drivers of fire occurrence – such as the increase of mean and extreme temperatures, altered precipitation patterns (Beniston, 2006), and land use change in the wildland–urban interface (WUI) (Moreira et al, 2011) – fire hazard maps and or danger indices based on past conditions may not be able to forecast the future influence of environmental and social drivers onto fire ignition

  • This study confirmed that fire regime in an alpine region has distinct patterns and causes depending on the ecosystem and season involved

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Summary

Introduction

Wildland fires drive the dynamics of vegetation in many parts of the world (Thonicke et al, 2001; Bond and Keeley, 2005), shaping landscape patterns and influencing the provision of productive and regulatory ecosystem services (Cannon, 2001; Conedera et al, 2003). In a context of changing anthropogenic and natural drivers of fire occurrence – such as the increase of mean and extreme temperatures, altered precipitation patterns (Beniston, 2006), and land use change (abandonment and/or higher tourist and urban pressures) in the wildland–urban interface (WUI) (Moreira et al, 2011) – fire hazard maps and or danger indices based on past conditions may not be able to forecast the future influence of environmental and social drivers onto fire ignition

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