Abstract

BackgroundAnthropogenic uses of fire play a key role in regulating fire regimes in African savannas. These fires contribute the highest proportion of the globally burned area, substantial biomass burning emissions and threaten maintenance and enhancement of carbon stocks. An understanding of fire regimes at local scales is required for the estimation and prediction of the contribution of these fires to the global carbon cycle and for fire management. We assessed the spatio-temporal distribution of fires in miombo woodlands of Tanzania, utilizing the MODIS active fire product and Landsat satellite images for the past ~40 years.ResultsOur results show that up to 50.6% of the woodland area is affected by fire each year. An early and a late dry season peak in wetter and drier miombo, respectively, characterize the annual fire season. Wetter miombo areas have higher fire activity within a shorter annual fire season and have shorter return intervals. The fire regime is characterized by small-sized fires, with a higher ratio of small than large burned areas in the frequency-size distribution (β = 2.16 ± 0.04). Large-sized fires are rare, and occur more frequently in drier than in wetter miombo. Both fire prevalence and burned extents have decreased in the past decade. At a large scale, more than half of the woodland area has less than 2 years of fire return intervals, which prevent the occurrence of large intense fires.ConclusionThe sizes of fires, season of burning and spatial extent of occurrence are generally consistent across time, at the scale of the current analysis. Where traditional use of fire is restricted, a reassessment of fire management strategies may be required, if sustainability of tree cover is a priority. In such cases, there is a need to combine traditional and contemporary fire management practices.

Highlights

  • Anthropogenic uses of fire play a key role in regulating fire regimes in African savannas

  • Viable fire management plans aiming at maintenance of stored carbon requires an understanding of historical fire regimes at local scales, which is generally lacking for many parts of African savannas

  • Small burned patches are more common in wet miombo than in dry miombo areas, with annual median ranging from 0.8 to 1.4 ha and 0.7 to 1.8 ha, respectively

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Summary

Introduction

Anthropogenic uses of fire play a key role in regulating fire regimes in African savannas. Viable fire management plans aiming at maintenance of stored carbon requires an understanding of historical fire regimes at local scales, which is generally lacking for many parts of African savannas. This understanding is required for precise estimates of the contribution of savanna fires in the global carbon dynamics. Characterization of current fire regimes at local scales is required in order to set references against which assessment of changes in burning practices and their contribution to the carbon cycle will be made [22] This is of particular importance in fire-adapted ecosystems, such as miombo woodlands, that support a wide range of human subsistence activities

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