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Wave of fire: an anthropogenic signal in historical fire regimes across central Pennsylvania, USA

机译:火浪:美国宾夕法尼亚州中部历史火情中的人为信号

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Increasingly 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.
机译:为了测试生态概念并为自然资源管理和决策提供信息,需要越来越详细的长期火灾状况记录。我们重建并分析了来自432棵活松和死松( Pungus pungens,硬松,松树, >宾夕法尼亚州中部的松果松我们使用了多种空间和时间序列分析方法来量化火灾状况特征(频率,季节,树木疤痕百分比,范围)以及火灾-气候-人的关联。在20世纪灭火之前,大多数地点的火灾情况包括频繁,中低度严重的休眠期火灾。在发生明显干旱的年份之前,火灾往往是区域同步的。我们使用文献档案,对“火浪”进行了首次描述,“火浪”是一种火源频率的人为信号,在整个区域内逐渐移动。这种“火灾浪潮”反映了人类火力制度从美国原住民的占领和人口减少,到欧美定居,再到工业化以及不断减少的火灾使用,直至20世纪的灭火时代正在发生变化。火灾浪潮为历史和现代火灾制度动态提供了新视角,并确定了自北美殖民以来的社会生态影响。由于北美各地的人为存在着火源,我们强调需要更广泛地确定其地理流行性和可变性,因为这种确定会影响历史生态学解释以及人类在管理火源生态系统中过去和未来作用的观点。

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