Estación Biológica Cocha Cashu

Application of remote sensing to understanding fire regimes and biomass burning emissions of the tropical Andes

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Revista Científica:

Global Biogeochemical Cycles

Año:

2014

Volumen:

28

Número:

4

Páginas:

335-496

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1002/2013GB004664open_in_new

ISSN:

ISSN0886-6236 eISSN1944-9224

Keywords (Autor):

remote sensing, tree line, tropical montane cloud forests, fire return interval

Resumen

In the tropical Andes, there have been very few systematic studies aimed at understanding the biomass burning dynamics in the area. This paper seeks to advance on our understanding of burning regimes in this region, with the first detailed and comprehensive assessment of fire occurrence and the derived gross biomass burning emissions of an area of the Peruvian tropical Andes. We selected an area of 2.8 million hectares at altitudes over 2000 m. We analyzed fire occurrence over a 12 year period with three types of satellite data. Fire dynamics showed a large intra-annual and interannual variability, with most fires occurring May–October (the period coinciding with the dry season). Total area burned decreased with increasing rainfall until a given rainfall threshold beyond which no relationship was found. The estimated fire return interval (FRI) for the area is 37 years for grasslands, which is within the range reported for grasslands, and 65 years for forests, which is remarkably shorter than other reported FRI in tropical moist forests. The greatest contribution (60–70%, depending on the data source) to biomass burning emissions came from burned montane cloud forests (4.5 million Mg CO2 over the study period), despite accounting for only 7.4–10% of the total burned area. Gross aboveground biomass emissions (7.55 ± 2.14 Tg CO2; 0.43 ± 0.04 Tg CO; 24,012 ± 2685 Mg CH4 for the study area) were larger than previously reported for the tropical Andes.

Copyright:

©2014. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.

Autor (es ):

Oliveras Immaculada,Anderson Liana O., Malhi Yadvinder

Editorial:

American Geophysical Union

Ciudad:

Washington, D.C

Idioma:

Inglés

Tipo de Referencia:

Articulo de revista academica

Investigadores: