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International Journal of Wildland Fire International Journal of Wildland Fire Society
Journal of the International Association of Wildland Fire
RESEARCH ARTICLE (Open Access)

Spatial and temporal opportunities for forest resilience promoted by burn severity attenuation across a productivity gradient in north western Patagonia

Florencia Tiribelli https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4746-1704 A B * , Juan Paritsis A , Iván Barberá A and Thomas Kitzberger A
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A INIBIOMA–Universidad Nacional del Comahue, CONICET, Quintral 1250, Bariloche 8400, Río Negro, Argentina.

B Present address: Department of Forest and Conservation Sciences, Faculty of Forestry, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada.

* Correspondence to: flopitiribelli@gmail.com

International Journal of Wildland Fire 33, WF23098 https://doi.org/10.1071/WF23098
Submitted: 20 June 2023  Accepted: 8 January 2024  Published: 1 February 2024

© 2024 The Author(s) (or their employer(s)). Published by CSIRO Publishing on behalf of IAWF. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-ND)

Abstract

Background

Fire regimes in many biomass-rich ecosystems worldwide are dominated by high-severity fires. Many of these systems lack fire-resistant traits or post-fire regeneration strategies. Understanding under which environmental and weather conditions they experience less severe fire is crucial for maintaining their persistence in the landscape.

Aims

Understand the spatial and temporal conditions that allow burn severity attenuation across Patagonia’s productivity gradient.

Methods

We modelled burn severity as a function of topography, weather, vegetation and productivity.

Key results

Low severity was a rare phenomenon, affecting only 8% of the areas burned. The probability of burning with high severity followed a hump-shaped relationship with productivity. Low severity occurred in fires that burned under cool and wet summer conditions in areas with sparser fuels or in wetter and more productive environments but with discontinuous and wet fuels.

Conclusions

Across the regional gradient, ecosystems of intermediate productivity generally lack conditions for low burn severity. Temporally, low burn severity occurs in smaller fires burning in productive ecosystems during cool and wet summers.

Implications

Future climate scenarios of increasing aridity and temperature in the region will disfavour conditions for low burn severity, thus promoting fire-mediated transitions from forests to alternative states dominated by more fire-adapted flammable species (e.g. shrublands).

Keywords: burn severity, ecosystems: temperate, fire severity, forest resilience, north west Patagonia, obligate seeders, productivity gradient, resproutes, shrublands.

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