Vegetation phenology as a key driver for fire occurrence in the UK and comparable humid temperate regions

Tadas Nikonovas, Cristina Santin, Claire Belcher, Gareth Clay, Nicholas Kettridge, Thomas Smith, Stefan Doerr

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background
Fire activity in the UK and comparable regions of northwest Europe is generally out of phase with peak fire weather conditions.

Aims
Here, we assess the potential effect of phenology on fire occurrence patterns for the UK.

Methods
We examined fire occurrence and vegetation phenology in the UK for 2012–2023, mapped onto the main fire-affected vegetation cover types within distinct precipitation regions, allowing the fire occurrence for fuels in different phenological phases to be explored across distinct ‘fuel’ types and regions.

Key results
The UK’s fire regime is characterised by burning in semi-natural grasslands and evergreen dwarf shrub ecosystems in early spring when vegetation is still dormant. During the high-greenness phase in late spring and summer, fire activity is reduced by a factor of 5–6 despite typically elevated fire weather conditions within that period.

Conclusions and implications
Semi-natural vegetation in the UK is very resistant to burning during the high-greenness phase. However, this ‘fire barrier’ is diminished during severe drought episodes, which are predicted to become more extreme in the coming decades. Incorporating phenology information into models therefore has great potential for improving future fire danger and behaviour predictions in the UK and comparable humid temperate regions.
Original languageEnglish
Article numberWF23205
JournalInternational Journal of Wildland Fire
Volume33
Issue number10
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 25 Sept 2024

Keywords

  • active fire detections
  • flammability
  • humid temperate regions
  • land cover
  • phenology
  • Suomi-NPP
  • vegetation fuels
  • VIIRS
  • wildfire regimes

Research Beacons, Institutes and Platforms

  • Manchester Environmental Research Institute

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