Technical note: Low meteorological influence found in 2019 Amazonia fires

<p>The sudden increase in Amazon fires early in the 2019 fire season made global headlines. While it has been heavily speculated that the fires were caused by deliberate human ignitions or human-induced landscape changes, there have also been suggestions that meteorological conditions could ha...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: D. I. Kelley, C. Burton, C. Huntingford, M. A. J. Brown, R. Whitley, N. Dong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2021-02-01
Series:Biogeosciences
Online Access:https://bg.copernicus.org/articles/18/787/2021/bg-18-787-2021.pdf
id doaj-7b2ad149b21743cfb1a83eb96bcb8f0b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7b2ad149b21743cfb1a83eb96bcb8f0b2021-02-04T08:45:10ZengCopernicus PublicationsBiogeosciences1726-41701726-41892021-02-011878780410.5194/bg-18-787-2021Technical note: Low meteorological influence found in 2019 Amazonia firesD. I. Kelley0C. Burton1C. Huntingford2M. A. J. Brown3M. A. J. Brown4R. Whitley5N. Dong6UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology, Wallingford, Oxfordshire, OX10 8BB, UKMet Office Hadley Centre, Fitzroy Road, Exeter, EX1 3PB, UKUK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology, Wallingford, Oxfordshire, OX10 8BB, UKUK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology, Wallingford, Oxfordshire, OX10 8BB, UKDISCnet Centre for Doctoral Training, School of Physical Sciences, The Open University, Walton Hall, Milton Keynes, MK7 6AA, UKNatural Perils Pricing, Commercial and Consumer Portfolio and Product, Suncorp Group, Sydney, AustraliaDepartment of Biological Sciences, Macquarie University, North Ryde, NSW 2109, Australia<p>The sudden increase in Amazon fires early in the 2019 fire season made global headlines. While it has been heavily speculated that the fires were caused by deliberate human ignitions or human-induced landscape changes, there have also been suggestions that meteorological conditions could have played a role. Here, we ask two questions: were the 2019 fires in the Amazon unprecedented in the historical record, and did the meteorological conditions contribute to the increased burning? To answer this, we take advantage of a recently developed modelling framework which optimises a simple fire model against observations of burnt area and whose outputs are described as probability densities. This allowed us to test the probability of the 2019 fire season occurring due to meteorological conditions alone. The observations show that the burnt area was higher than in previous years in regions where there is already substantial deforestation activity in the Amazon. Overall, 11 % of the area recorded the highest early season (June–August) burnt area since the start of our observational record, with areas in Brazil's central arc of deforestation recording the highest ever monthly burnt area in August. However, areas outside of the regions of widespread deforestation show less burnt area than the historical average, and the optimised model shows that this low burnt area would have extended over much of the eastern Amazon region, including in Brazil's central arc of deforestation with high fire occurrence in 2019. We show that there is a 9 % likelihood of the observed August fires being caused by meteorological conditions alone, decreasing to 6 %–7 % along the agricultural–humid forest interface in Brazil's central states and 8 % in Paraguay and Bolivia dry forests. Our results suggest that changes in land use, cover or management are the likely drivers of the substantial increase in the 2019 early fire season burnt area, especially in Brazil. Burnt area for September in the arc of deforestation had a 14 %–26 % probability of being caused by meteorological conditions, potentially coinciding with a shift in fire-related policy from South American governments.</p>https://bg.copernicus.org/articles/18/787/2021/bg-18-787-2021.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author D. I. Kelley
C. Burton
C. Huntingford
M. A. J. Brown
M. A. J. Brown
R. Whitley
N. Dong
spellingShingle D. I. Kelley
C. Burton
C. Huntingford
M. A. J. Brown
M. A. J. Brown
R. Whitley
N. Dong
Technical note: Low meteorological influence found in 2019 Amazonia fires
Biogeosciences
author_facet D. I. Kelley
C. Burton
C. Huntingford
M. A. J. Brown
M. A. J. Brown
R. Whitley
N. Dong
author_sort D. I. Kelley
title Technical note: Low meteorological influence found in 2019 Amazonia fires
title_short Technical note: Low meteorological influence found in 2019 Amazonia fires
title_full Technical note: Low meteorological influence found in 2019 Amazonia fires
title_fullStr Technical note: Low meteorological influence found in 2019 Amazonia fires
title_full_unstemmed Technical note: Low meteorological influence found in 2019 Amazonia fires
title_sort technical note: low meteorological influence found in 2019 amazonia fires
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Biogeosciences
issn 1726-4170
1726-4189
publishDate 2021-02-01
description <p>The sudden increase in Amazon fires early in the 2019 fire season made global headlines. While it has been heavily speculated that the fires were caused by deliberate human ignitions or human-induced landscape changes, there have also been suggestions that meteorological conditions could have played a role. Here, we ask two questions: were the 2019 fires in the Amazon unprecedented in the historical record, and did the meteorological conditions contribute to the increased burning? To answer this, we take advantage of a recently developed modelling framework which optimises a simple fire model against observations of burnt area and whose outputs are described as probability densities. This allowed us to test the probability of the 2019 fire season occurring due to meteorological conditions alone. The observations show that the burnt area was higher than in previous years in regions where there is already substantial deforestation activity in the Amazon. Overall, 11 % of the area recorded the highest early season (June–August) burnt area since the start of our observational record, with areas in Brazil's central arc of deforestation recording the highest ever monthly burnt area in August. However, areas outside of the regions of widespread deforestation show less burnt area than the historical average, and the optimised model shows that this low burnt area would have extended over much of the eastern Amazon region, including in Brazil's central arc of deforestation with high fire occurrence in 2019. We show that there is a 9 % likelihood of the observed August fires being caused by meteorological conditions alone, decreasing to 6 %–7 % along the agricultural–humid forest interface in Brazil's central states and 8 % in Paraguay and Bolivia dry forests. Our results suggest that changes in land use, cover or management are the likely drivers of the substantial increase in the 2019 early fire season burnt area, especially in Brazil. Burnt area for September in the arc of deforestation had a 14 %–26 % probability of being caused by meteorological conditions, potentially coinciding with a shift in fire-related policy from South American governments.</p>
url https://bg.copernicus.org/articles/18/787/2021/bg-18-787-2021.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT dikelley technicalnotelowmeteorologicalinfluencefoundin2019amazoniafires
AT cburton technicalnotelowmeteorologicalinfluencefoundin2019amazoniafires
AT chuntingford technicalnotelowmeteorologicalinfluencefoundin2019amazoniafires
AT majbrown technicalnotelowmeteorologicalinfluencefoundin2019amazoniafires
AT majbrown technicalnotelowmeteorologicalinfluencefoundin2019amazoniafires
AT rwhitley technicalnotelowmeteorologicalinfluencefoundin2019amazoniafires
AT ndong technicalnotelowmeteorologicalinfluencefoundin2019amazoniafires
_version_ 1724285377971224576