Desa’a national forest reserve susceptibility to fire under climate change

Climate change influences spreading and occurrence of forest fire. Forest fire modeling is one of the most important tasks to fight forest fires. Climate data of current (1980–2010) was projected to near (2010–2039), mid (2040–2069) and end-term (2070–2099) using Representative Concentration Pathway...

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Main Authors: Haftu Abrha, Kelali Adhana
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2019-07-01
Series:Forest Science and Technology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21580103.2019.1628109
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spelling doaj-c0167eceaf9445bba81379b43eafd7f82020-11-25T01:26:22ZengTaylor & Francis GroupForest Science and Technology2158-01032158-07152019-07-0115314014610.1080/21580103.2019.16281091628109Desa’a national forest reserve susceptibility to fire under climate changeHaftu Abrha0Kelali Adhana1Mekelle UniversityMekelle UniversityClimate change influences spreading and occurrence of forest fire. Forest fire modeling is one of the most important tasks to fight forest fires. Climate data of current (1980–2010) was projected to near (2010–2039), mid (2040–2069) and end-term (2070–2099) using Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP4.5 and 8.5) of an ensemble of twenty General Circulation Models using R-software. Current and projected climate data were used to determine the impact of climate change on current and future forest fire using Keetch-Byram Drought Index. Current and future forest fire-vulnerable areas were mapped and weighed using Inverse Distance Weighting. The result indicates that, while no forest fire occurrence in the current, there might be a high forest fire risk in near-term. It might be become very high in mid and end-term. The size of forest fire-vulnerable areas might be increased to 12.85, 18.8, 17.1 and 46.26% in Mid-RCP4.5, Mid-RCP8.5, End-RCP4.5 and End-term-RCP8.5 respectively. Fire may occurred in winter and spring seasons. The risk might be move to higher elevation of the forest. This directs increase of forest fire occurrence and spread due to climate change. The study recommends that forest fire management should be applied before fire happened to sustain the forest and its products.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21580103.2019.1628109WildfireforestdroughtriskKBDIS
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Haftu Abrha
Kelali Adhana
spellingShingle Haftu Abrha
Kelali Adhana
Desa’a national forest reserve susceptibility to fire under climate change
Forest Science and Technology
Wildfire
forest
drought
risk
KBDIS
author_facet Haftu Abrha
Kelali Adhana
author_sort Haftu Abrha
title Desa’a national forest reserve susceptibility to fire under climate change
title_short Desa’a national forest reserve susceptibility to fire under climate change
title_full Desa’a national forest reserve susceptibility to fire under climate change
title_fullStr Desa’a national forest reserve susceptibility to fire under climate change
title_full_unstemmed Desa’a national forest reserve susceptibility to fire under climate change
title_sort desa’a national forest reserve susceptibility to fire under climate change
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Forest Science and Technology
issn 2158-0103
2158-0715
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Climate change influences spreading and occurrence of forest fire. Forest fire modeling is one of the most important tasks to fight forest fires. Climate data of current (1980–2010) was projected to near (2010–2039), mid (2040–2069) and end-term (2070–2099) using Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP4.5 and 8.5) of an ensemble of twenty General Circulation Models using R-software. Current and projected climate data were used to determine the impact of climate change on current and future forest fire using Keetch-Byram Drought Index. Current and future forest fire-vulnerable areas were mapped and weighed using Inverse Distance Weighting. The result indicates that, while no forest fire occurrence in the current, there might be a high forest fire risk in near-term. It might be become very high in mid and end-term. The size of forest fire-vulnerable areas might be increased to 12.85, 18.8, 17.1 and 46.26% in Mid-RCP4.5, Mid-RCP8.5, End-RCP4.5 and End-term-RCP8.5 respectively. Fire may occurred in winter and spring seasons. The risk might be move to higher elevation of the forest. This directs increase of forest fire occurrence and spread due to climate change. The study recommends that forest fire management should be applied before fire happened to sustain the forest and its products.
topic Wildfire
forest
drought
risk
KBDIS
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21580103.2019.1628109
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AT kelaliadhana desaanationalforestreservesusceptibilitytofireunderclimatechange
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