Literature DB >> 22395617

Power laws reveal phase transitions in landscape controls of fire regimes.

Donald McKenzie1, Maureen C Kennedy.   

Abstract

Understanding the environmental controls on historical wildfires, and how they changed across spatial scales, is difficult because there are no surviving explicit records of either weather or vegetation (fuels). Here we show how power laws associated with fire-event time series arise in limited domains of parameters that represent critical transitions in the controls on landscape fire. Comparison to a self-organized criticality model shows that the latter mimics historical fire only in a limited domain of criticality, and is not an adequate mechanism to explain landscape fire dynamics, which are shaped by both endogenous and exogenous controls. Our results identify a continuous phase transition in landscape controls, marked by power laws, and provide an ecological analogue to critical behaviour in physical and chemical systems. This explicitly cross-scale analysis provides a paradigm for identifying critical thresholds in landscape dynamics that may be crossed in a rapidly changing climate.

Mesh:

Year:  2012        PMID: 22395617     DOI: 10.1038/ncomms1731

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nat Commun        ISSN: 2041-1723            Impact factor:   14.919


  6 in total

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Authors: 
Journal:  Phys Rev Lett       Date:  1995-07-17       Impact factor: 9.161

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Authors:  James H Brown; Vijay K Gupta; Bai-Lian Li; Bruce T Milne; Carla Restrepo; Geoffrey B West
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2002-05-29       Impact factor: 6.237

3.  Self-organized critical forest-fire model.

Authors: 
Journal:  Phys Rev Lett       Date:  1992-09-14       Impact factor: 9.161

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Authors:  Bruce D Malamud; James D A Millington; George L W Perry
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2005-03-21       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  Criticality and disturbance in spatial ecological systems.

Authors:  Mercedes Pascual; Frédéric Guichard
Journal:  Trends Ecol Evol       Date:  2004-12-02       Impact factor: 17.712

6.  Forest fires: An example of self-organized critical behavior

Authors: 
Journal:  Science       Date:  1998-09-18       Impact factor: 47.728

  6 in total
  3 in total

1.  Power laws and critical fragmentation in global forests.

Authors:  Leonardo A Saravia; Santiago R Doyle; Ben Bond-Lamberty
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2018-12-10       Impact factor: 4.379

2.  U.S. fires became larger, more frequent, and more widespread in the 2000s.

Authors:  Virginia Iglesias; Jennifer K Balch; William R Travis
Journal:  Sci Adv       Date:  2022-03-16       Impact factor: 14.136

3.  Identifying the threshold of dominant controls on fire spread in a boreal forest landscape of Northeast China.

Authors:  Zhihua Liu; Jian Yang; Hong S He
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-01-31       Impact factor: 3.240

  3 in total

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