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The role of climate-fuel feedbacks on Holocene biomass burning in upper-montane Carpathian forests

Carter, Vachel A. and Bobek, Přemysl and Moravcová, Alice and Šolcová, Anna and Chiverrell, Richard C. and Clear, Jennifer L. and Finsinger, Walter and Feurdean, Angelica and Tanţău, Ioan and Magyari, Enikő and Brussel, Thomas and Kuneš, Petr (2020) The role of climate-fuel feedbacks on Holocene biomass burning in upper-montane Carpathian forests. GLOBAL AND PLANETARY CHANGE, 193. p. 103264. ISSN 0921-8181 (print); 1872-6364 (online)

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Abstract

Over the past few decades, mean summer temperatures within the Carpathian Mountains have increased by as much as 2 °C leading to a projected increased forest fire risk. Currently, there are no paleofire records from the Western Carpathians that provide the long-term range of natural variability to contextualise the response of upper-montane forests to future environmental change and disturbance regimes. We present the first high-resolution Holocene fire history record from the upper-montane ecotone from the High Tatra Mountains, Slovakia, as well as provide a regional synthesis of pan-Carpathian drivers of biomass burning in upper-montane forests. Our results illustrate that forest composition and density both greatly influence biomass burning, creating two different climate-fuel feedbacks. First, warmer conditions in the early Holocene, coupled with generally higher abundances of Pinus sp., either P. cembra and/or P. mugo/sylvestris, created a positive climate-fuel relationship that resulted in higher amounts of biomass burning. Second, cooler and wetter late Holocene conditions led to denser Picea abies upper-montane forests, creating a negative climate-fuel feedback that reduced biomass burning in upper-montane forests across the Carpathians. Given that warmer and drier conditions are expected across the entire Carpathian region in the future, our results illustrate how future climate change could potentially create a positive climate-fuel relationship within upper-montane forests dominated by Picea abies and Pinus cembra and/or P. mugo/sylvestris.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Q Science / természettudomány > QH Natural history / természetrajz > QH526 Paleontology / őslénytan
Depositing User: Piroska Pazonyi
Date Deposited: 15 Nov 2021 13:58
Last Modified: 03 Apr 2023 07:29
URI: http://real.mtak.hu/id/eprint/133448

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