Abstract

Savannahs are mixed woody-grass communities where low-intensity surface fires are common, affecting mostly the grass layer and rarely damaging trees. We investigated the effect of surface fires in a savannah system in the Kruger National Park, South Africa, on the backscatter of synthetic aperture radar (SAR) C-band Sentinel-1A images. Pre-fire and post-fire dual polarized (VH, VV) C-band backscatter values were examined for 30 burn events. For all events, a systematic backscatter decrease from pre-fire to post-fire conditions was observed, with mean backscatter decreases of 1.61 dB and 0.99 dB for VH and VV, respectively. A total of 90% and 75% of the burn events showed a decrease in VH and VV backscatter greater than 0.43 dB, the overall absolute radiometric of Sentinel-1A products. The VH data were, overall, 1.7 times more sensitive to surface fire effects than the VV data. C-band data are likely sensitive to a reduction in grass biomass typical of surface fires, as well as in grass/soil moisture levels. Early season fires had higher backscatter decreases due to greater early season moisture conditions. For region with more than 30% woody cover, the effect of fire on the C-band backscatter was reduced. Denser woody communities tend to produce lower grass fuel load and less intense surface fires, and limit the penetration of C-band microwaves to the ground where most savannah fires and associated effects occur. This research provides evidence that C-band space-borne SAR is sensitive to the effects of surface-level fires in southern African savannahs. The unique availability of frequent and spatially detailed C-band data from the Sentinel-1 SAR constellation provide new opportunities for burned area mapping and systematic monitoring in savannahs systems, for instance, for fine-scale fire propagation studies.

Highlights

  • Fires occur more in savannahs than in any other biome [1,2]

  • We considered a correction factor calculated to quantify and partially correct for non-fire-related environmental changes, which may impact backscatter changes occurring between the pre-fire and post-fire Sentinel-1 dates

  • We hypothesized that C-band backscatter would be affected by the removal of grass scatterers in surface fires in savannahs, and that the C-band VH backscatter would be more sensitive than the VV backscatter

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Summary

Introduction

Fires occur more in savannahs than in any other biome [1,2]. They emit large quantities of aerosols and greenhouse gases [3] and are an important vegetation disturbance [4]. And temporally explicit maps of burned area are needed to estimate aerosols and gaseous emissions for modelling climate variability, carbon budgets, pollutant transport, and air quality [3,18,19,20], and to improve our understanding of fire processes and impacts on ecosystem services [21,22]. Improved knowledge on fire occurrence may support the development of policies, management strategies, and operations to enhance its effective use, control, and protection against fire [23,24,25]

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