Abstract

AbstractIncreasingly detailed records of long‐term fire regime characteristics are needed to test ecological concepts and inform natural resource management and policymaking. We reconstructed and analyzed twelve 350+ yr‐long fire scar records developed from 2612 tree‐ring dated fire scars on 432 living and dead pine (Pinus pungens, Pinus rigida, Pinus resinosa, Pinus echinata) trees from across central Pennsylvania. We used multiple spatial and time series analysis methods to quantify fire regime characteristics (frequency, seasonality, percentages of trees scarred, extent) and fire–climate–human associations. Prior to the 20th‐century fire suppression, fire regimes at the majority of sites consisted of frequent, low‐to‐moderate severity, dormant season fires. Fires were often regionally synchronous when preceded by significantly dry years. Using documentary archives, we provide the first description of a “wave of fire”—an anthropogenic signal in fire frequency that progressively moved across the region. This “wave of fire” reflects a changing progression of anthropogenic fire regimes from Native American occupation and depopulation, to Euro‐American settlement, to industrialization and declining fire use up to the 20th century era of fire suppression. The wave of fire provides a new perspective on historical and modern fire regime dynamics and identifies socio‐ecological impacts since North American colonization. Because the anthropogenic wave of fire exists at sites across North America, we emphasize the need for a broader determination of its geographic prevalence and variability as such determinations could influence historical ecology interpretations and perspectives on past and future roles of humans in managing ecosystems with fire.

Highlights

  • Throughout the world, wildland fire science provides context for natural resource management and policymaking (Bradstock 2010, Moritz et al 2012, Scott et al 2013)

  • In times post-Euro-American settlement (EAS), at the time of sampling, all of the study sites were in the longest fire-free period of their entire record with the number of years since the last fire ranging from 56 to 119

  • As discussed in Brose et al (2013), pre-EAS fire frequency at the Pine Creek Valley sites was more similar to those reported in red pine stands in Vermont and the Great Lakes than those of Appalachia (Engstrom and Mann 1991, Mann et al 1994, Drobyshev et al 2008)

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Summary

Introduction

Throughout the world, wildland fire science provides context for natural resource management and policymaking (Bradstock 2010, Moritz et al 2012, Scott et al 2013). Understanding how fire influences ecosystem biodiversity, biogeochemistry (Archibald et al 2012, Noss et al 2015), and global change (Krawchuk et al 2009) is at the forefront of natural resource management and earth and social sciences (Knorr et al 2016). Emphasis has been placed on understanding wildland fire in physical and biological contexts, with social contexts being less understood and developed (Pyne 2007). Global fire regime alterations by humans since the Industrial Revolution appear unprecedented in magnitude and dynamics compared to recent millennia (Marlon et al 2008, Bowman et al 2009)

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