Author:
Carnicer Jofre,Alegria Andrés,Giannakopoulos Christos,Di Giuseppe Francesca,Karali Anna,Koutsias Nikos,Lionello Piero,Parrington Mark,Vitolo Claudia
Abstract
AbstractFire activity has significantly changed in Europe over the last decades (1980–2020s), with the emergence of summers attaining unprecedented fire prone weather conditions. Here we report a significant shift in the non-stationary relationship linking fire weather conditions and fire intensity measured in terms of CO2 emissions released during biomass burning across a latitudinal gradient of European IPCC regions. The reported trends indicate that global warming is possibly inducing an incipient change on regional fire dynamics towards increased fire impacts in Europe, suggesting that emerging risks posed by exceptional fire-weather danger conditions may progressively exceed current wildfire suppression capabilities in the next decades and impact forest carbon sinks.
Funder
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación
MICINN
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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