Half of global burned area is due to managed anthropogenic fire: findings from a coupled socio-ecological modelling approach 

Oliver Perkins,Matthew Kasoar,Apostolos Voulgarakis, Tamsin Edwards,James Millington

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摘要
Globally, vegetation fires are a key component of many ecosystems and have substantial impacts on carbon emissions. Yet humans also use and manage fires for a huge range of purposes around the world, dependent on numerous social and biophysical factors. Existing representations of anthropogenic fire in dynamic global vegetation models (DGVMs) have been highly simplified, with readily available global variables (e.g. population density) used to estimate numbers of anthropogenic ignitions. Here, we present results from a novel coupled socio-ecological modelling approach to improve understanding of how human and biophysical factors combine to drive the spatio-temporal distribution of global fire regimes. Specifically, we present the integration of two process-based models. The first is the Wildfire Human Agency Model (WHAM!1), which draws on agent-based approaches to represent anthropogenic fire use and management. The second model is JULES-INFERNO2, a fire-enabled DGVM, which takes a physically-grounded approach to the representation of vegetation-fire dynamics. The new WHAM-INFERNO model ensemble suggests that as much as half of all global burned area is generated by managed anthropogenic fires - typically small fires that are lit and spread according to specific land use objectives (such as crop residue burning). Furthermore, we demonstrate that including representation of managed anthropogenic fires in a coupled socio-ecological simulation can improve understanding of the biophysical drivers of unmanaged wildfires, by allowing clearer recognition of the role of anthropogenic land management in global fire regimes. Hence, WHAM-INFERNO is applied to understand how landscape fragmentation, wider land use change, and changes in human fire management have together led to observed recent declines in global burned area despite the warming climate. Overall, findings presented here have substantial implications for understanding of present and future fire regimes, indicating that changes to socio-economic systems are at least as important a consideration as climate change.   1. Perkins, O., Kasoar, M., Voulgarakis, A., Smith, C., Mistry, J., and Millington, J. (2023). A global behavioural model of human fire use and management: WHAM! v1.0. EGUsphere, 1–42. 10.5194/egusphere-2023-2162. 2. Mangeon, S., Voulgarakis, A., Gilham, R., Harper, A., Sitch, S., and Folberth, G. (2016). INFERNO: a fire and emissions scheme for the UK Met Office’s Unified Model. Geosci. Model Dev. 9, 2685–2700. 10.5194/gmd-9-2685-2016.
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