Abstract

Fires that emit massive amounts of CO2 and particulate matter now burn with regularity in Southeast Asian tropical peatlands. Natural peatlands in Southeast Asia are waterlogged for most of the year and experience little or no fire, but networks of canals constructed for agriculture have drained vast areas of these peatlands, making the soil vulnerable to fire during periods of low rainfall. While soil moisture is the most direct measure of peat flammability, it has not been incorporated into fire studies due to an absence of regional observations. Here, we create the first remotely sensed soil moisture dataset for tropical peatlands in Sumatra, Borneo and Peninsular Malaysia by applying a new retrieval algorithm to satellite data from the Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP) mission with data spanning the 2015 El Niño burning event. Drier soil up to 30 days prior to fire correlates with larger burned area. The predictive information provided by soil moisture complements that of precipitation. Our remote sensing-derived results mirror those from a laboratory-based peat ignition study, suggesting that the dependence of fire on soil moisture exhibits scale independence within peatlands. Soil moisture measured from SMAP, a dataset spanning 2015-present, is a valuable resource for peat fire studies and warning systems.

Highlights

  • Fires in tropical peatlands of Insular Southeast Asia (ISEA) have dramatically increased in scale and severity over the past 30 years

  • Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP) soil moisture measurements are possible in tropical peatlands Peat fire is dominated by smoldering combustion of organic material in the unsaturated zone (Turetsky et al 2015)

  • Even shallow surface soil moisture measurements such as those from SMAP provide information about fuel moisture throughout the vadose zone. This enhances the potential of remotely sensed surface soil moisture measurements for forecasting peat fire risk

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Summary

September 2019

Nathan C Dadap1,4 , Alexander R Cobb , Alison M Hoyt , Charles F Harvey and Alexandra G Konings.

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