Research article - Peer-reviewed, 2022
Climate drove the fire cycle and humans influenced fire occurrence in the East European boreal forest
Ryzhkova, N.; Kryshen, A.; Niklasson, M.; Pinto, G.; Aleinikov, A.; Kutyavin, I; Bergeron, Y.; Ali, Adam A.; Drobyshev, IAbstract
Understanding long-term forest fire histories of boreal landscapes is instrumental for parameterizing climate-fire interactions and the role of humans affecting natural fire regimes. The eastern sections of the European boreal zone currently lack a network of annually resolved and centuries-long forest fire histories. To fill in this knowledge gap, we dendrochronologically reconstructed the 600-year fire history of a middle boreal pine-dominated landscape of the southern part of the Republic of Komi, Russia. We combined the reconstruction of fire cycle (FC) and fire occurrence with the data on the village establishment and climate proxies and discussed the relative contribution of climate versus human land use in shaping historic fire regimes. Over the 1340-1610 ce period, the territory had a FC of 66 years (with the 90% confidence envelope of 56.8 and 78.6 years). Fire activity increased during the 1620-1730 ce period, with the FC reaching 32 years (31.0-34.7 years). Between 1740-1950, the FC increased to 47 years (41.9-52.0). The most recent period, 1960-2010, marks FC's historic maximum, with the mean of 153 years (102.5-270.3). Establishment of the villages, often as small harbors on the Pechora River, was associated with a non-significant increase in fire occurrence in the sites nearest the villages (p = 0.07-0.20). We, however, observed a temporal association between village establishment and fire occurrence at the scale of the whole studied landscape. There was no positive association between the former and the FC. In fact, we documented a decline in the area burned, following the wave of village establishment during the second half of the 1600s and the first half of the 1700s. The lack of association between the dynamics of FC and the dates of village establishments, and the significant association between large fire years and the early and latewood pine chronologies, used as historic drought proxy, indirectly suggests that the climate was the primary control of the landscape-level FCs in the studied forests. Pine-dominated forests of the Komi Republic may hold a unique position as the ecosystem with the shortest history of human-related shifts in fire cycles across the European boreal region.Keywords
boreal landscape; climate variation; fire regime; natural disturbances; natural hazards; northeastern Russia; pine-dominated forestsPublished in
Ecological Monographs2022, volume: 92, number: 4, article number: e1530
Publisher: WILEY
Authors' information
Ryzhkova, N.
Forest Research Institute of Karelian Research Centre Russian Academy of Sciences
Ryzhkova, N.
University of Quebec
Kryshen, A.
Forest Research Institute of Karelian Research Centre Russian Academy of Sciences
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Southern Swedish Forest Research Centre
Nordens ark
Stecher Justiniano Pinto, Guilherme (Stecher Justiniano Pinto, Guilherme Alexandre)
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Southern Swedish Forest Research Centre
Pinto, Guilherme (Stecher Justiniano Pinto, Guilherme Alexandre)
German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv)
Aleinikov, A.
Russian Academy of Sciences
Kutyavin, I
Komi Science Centre of the Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences
Bergeron, Y.
University of Quebec
Ali, Adam A.
Universite de Montpellier
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Southern Swedish Forest Research Centre
Université du Québec en Abitibi-Témiscamingue (UQAT)
Russian Academy of Sciences
University of Quebec Montreal (UQAM)
UKÄ Subject classification
Ecology
Climate Research
Publication Identifiers
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/ecm.1530
URI (permanent link to this page)
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/118277