Fire | |
In the Line of Fire: Consequences of Human-Ignited Wildfires to Homes in the U.S. (1992–2015) | |
BethanyA. Bradley1  Tania Schoennagel2  LiseA. St. Denis3  JenniferK. Balch3  Stefan Leyk3  Nathan Mietkiewicz3  | |
[1] Department of Environmental Conservation, 160 Holdsworth Way, University of Massachusetts-Amherst, Amherst, MA 01003, USA;Department of Geography, GUGG 110, 260 UCB, University of Colorado-Boulder, Boulder, CO 80309, USA;Earth Lab, 4001 Discovery Drive Suite S348—UCB 611, University of Colorado-Boulder, Boulder, CO 80309, USA; | |
关键词: WUI; fire; defensible space; prescribed fire; community vulnerability; fire suppression costs; | |
DOI : 10.3390/fire3030050 | |
来源: DOAJ |
【 摘 要 】
With climate-driven increases in wildfires in the western U.S., it is imperative to understand how the risk to homes is also changing nationwide. Here, we quantify the number of homes threatened, suppression costs, and ignition sources for 1.6 million wildfires in the United States (U.S.; 1992–2015). Human-caused wildfires accounted for 97% of the residential homes threatened (within 1 km of a wildfire) and nearly a third of suppression costs. This study illustrates how the wildland-urban interface (WUI), which accounts for only a small portion of U.S. land area (~10%), acts as a major source of fires, almost exclusively human-started. Cumulatively (1992–2015), just over one million homes were within human-caused wildfire perimeters in the WUI, where communities are built within flammable vegetation. An additional 58.8 million homes were within one kilometer across the 24-year record. On an annual basis in the WUI (1999–2014), an average of 2.5 million homes (2.2–2.8 million, 95% confidence interval) were threatened by human-started wildfires (within the perimeter and up to 1-km away). The number of residential homes in the WUI grew by ~32 million from 1990–2015. The convergence of warmer, drier conditions and greater development into flammable landscapes is leaving many communities vulnerable to human-caused wildfires. Cumulatively, ~60 million homes were at high fire risk (1992–2015), meaning they were within historic wildfire perimeters or up to 1 km away. On average, 2.5 million homes were considered high fire risk each year. Our analysis explored the consequences and costs of wildfire ignitions along a gradient from urban to wildlands between 1992–2015. This study illustrates how the WUI, a small portion of U.S. land area that contains homes within flammable wildland vegetation, acts as a major source of wildfires, almost exclusively human-started. These areas are a high priority for policy and management efforts that aim to reduce human ignitions and promote resilience to future fires, particularly as the number of residential homes in the WUI grew by ~32 million across this record and are expected to continue to grow in coming years.
【 授权许可】
Unknown