Perilous
Times and Climate Change
Southern South American wildfires expected to increase
by Staff Writers
Boulder CO (SPX) Aug 24, 2011
This 2010 photo shows the aftermath of a wildfire outside the town
of Futaleufu in southern Chile. A new study by CU-Boulder
researchers indicates that wildfires may intensify in southern
South America in the coming decades. Credit: Andres Holz.
A new University of Colorado Boulder study indicates a major
climate oscillation in the Southern Hemisphere that is expected to
intensify in the coming decades will likely cause increased
wildfire activity in the southern half of South America.
The research team used tree rings dating to 1506 to track past
wildfire activity in the forests of Patagonia tied to the Southern
Annular Mode, or SAM, a climate oscillation that creates low
atmospheric pressure in the Antarctic that is tied to warmer and
drier conditions in southern South America.
The tree rings showed that when SAM was in its positive phase,
there were widespread fires in both dry woodlands and rainforests
in Patagonia, a region that straddles Argentina and Chile, said
CU-Boulder Research Associate Andres Holz, lead study author.
"Our study shows for about the past 250 years, the Southern
Annular Mode has been the main driver in creating droughts and
fires in two very different ecosystems in southern South America,"
said Holz.
"Climate models suggest an increase in SAM beginning in the 1960s
due to greenhouse gas increases and Antarctic ozone depletion
probably will cause this region to be drought-prone and fire-prone
for at least the next 100 years."
A paper on the subject by Holz and CU-Boulder geography Professor
Thomas Veblen was published in Geophysical Research Letters.
Holz and Veblen compared past wildfire records for two
ecologically distinct regions in Patagonia - the relatively dry
region of southern Patagonia in Argentina and the temperate
rainforest of Patagonia in northern Chile.
While the tree ring historical record showed increased fires in
both regions correlated with a positive SAM, the trend has been
less pronounced in northern Patagonia in the past 50 years, likely
because of fire-suppression efforts there, Holz said.
But the decades of fire suppression have caused the northern
Patagonian woodlands to become denser and more prone towildfire
during hot and dry years, Holz said.
"Even in areas of northern Patagonia where fire suppression
previously had been effective, record surface areas of woodlands
and forests have burned in recent years of extreme drought," said
Veblen.
"And since this is in an area of rapid residential growth into
wildland-urban interface areas, this climate-driven trend towards
increasing fire risk is becoming a major problem for land managers
and homeowners."
The two CU-Boulder researchers studied reconstructions of tree
rings going back more than 500 years from 432 trees at 42 sample
sites in northern Argentina and southern Chile - the largest
available data set of annual, readable tree ring records in the
Southern Hemisphere.
The tree rings, which indicate climate cycles and reveal the scars
of old fires, showed that wildfires generally increased in both
regions when SAM was in its strong, positive phase.
Although the Antarctic ozone hole stopped growing in about 2000 as
a result of a ban on ozone-depleting gases and now appears to be
slowly repairing itself, a 2011 paper by researchers at the
National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder indicates
ozone recovery and greenhouse gas influences essentially will
cancel each other out, preventing SAM from returning to its
pre-1960s levels.
"Before the Industrial Revolution, SAM intensified naturally at
times to create drought situations in Patagonia," Holz said. "But
in the last 80 years or so, the natural variation has been
overwhelmed by a bias toward a positive SAM phase because of
ozone-depleting chemicals and greenhouse gases we have put in the
atmosphere."
The research effort was supported by the National Geographic
Society, the National Science Foundation, the CU Beverly Sears
Small Grants Program and the Council on Research and
CreativeResearch of the CU Graduate School.
"As warming and drying trends continue, it is likely that wildfire
activity will increase even in woodland areas where fire
suppression has previously been effective," Holz and Veblen wrote
in Geophysical Research Letters.