Abstract

Fire risk can be defined as the probability that a fire will spread across a landscape, that therefore determines the likely area burnt by a wildfire. Reliable monitoring of fire risk is essential for effective landscape management. Compilation of fire risk records enable identification of seasonal and inter-annual patterns and provide a baseline to evaluate the trajectories in response to climate change. Typically, fire risk is estimated from meteorological data. In regions with sparse meteorological station coverage environmental proxies provide important additional data source for estimating past and current fire risk. Here, we use a 60-year record of daily flows (ML day−1 past a fixed-point river gauge) from two rivers (Franklin and Davey) in the remote Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area (TWWHA) to characterize seasonal patterns in fire risk in temperate Eucalyptus forests and rainforests. We show that river flows are strongly related to landscape soil moisture estimates derived from down-scaled re-analysis of meteorological data available since 1990. To identify river flow thresholds where forests are likely to burn, we relate river flows to known forest fires that have occurred in the previously defined ecohydrological domains that surround the Franklin and Davey catchments. Our analysis shows that the fire season in the TWWHA is centered on February (70% of all years below the median river flow threshold), with shoulders on December-January and March. Since 1954, forest fire can occur in at least one month for all but four summers in the ecohydrological domain that includes the Franklin catchment, and since 1964 fire could occur in at least one month in every summer in the ecohydrological domain that includes the Davey catchment. Our analysis shows that managers can use river flows as a simple index that indicates landscape-scale forest fire risk in the TWWHA.

Highlights

  • Fire risk can be defined as the probability that a fire will spread across a landscape [1], affecting likely area burnt by wildfire

  • The geographical domain of our analysis was based on the ecohydrological land and water management polygons derived from the Conservation of Freshwater Ecosystem Values (CFEV) spatial dataset provided by the Tasmanian government, which included Davey and Franklin catchments [21]

  • Our analysis shows that the flows of two major Tasmanian undammed rivers provide a reliable landscape proxy for forest flammability in the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area (TWWHA)

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Summary

Introduction

Fire risk can be defined as the probability that a fire will spread across a landscape [1], affecting likely area burnt by wildfire. With the advent of down-scaled meteorological products it is possible to estimate soil moisture, and fuel moisture, across landscapes for the last three decades [7] The availability of such estimates enables refined understanding of historic spatio-temporal patterns of fire hazard and improved predictions of fire behaviour. The short record length of down-scaled meteorological data hampers quantifying basic parameters about frequency of extreme events and trends in fire risk over longer times scales. This problem is acute for remote environments that have very spare meteorological coverage, and for vegetation communities with fire regimes with long fire-return intervals

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