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Unprecedented fire activity above the Arctic Circle linked to rising temperatures.

Adrià DescalsDavid L A GaveauAleixandre VergerDouglas SheilDaisuke NaitoJosep Penuelas
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2022)
Arctic fires can release large amounts of carbon from permafrost peatlands. Satellite observations reveal that fires burned ~4.7 million hectares in 2019 and 2020, accounting for 44% of the total burned area in the Siberian Arctic for the entire 1982-2020 period. The summer of 2020 was the warmest in four decades, with fires burning an unprecedentedly large area of carbon-rich soils. We show that factors of fire associated with temperature have increased in recent decades and identified a near-exponential relationship between these factors and annual burned area. Large fires in the Arctic are likely to recur with climatic warming before mid-century, because the temperature trend is reaching a threshold in which small increases in temperature are associated with exponential increases in the area burned.
Keyphrases
  • climate change
  • heavy metals
  • genome wide
  • gene expression
  • risk assessment