Strategic Communications and Marketing News Bureau

Study: Alaskan boreal forest fires release more carbon than the trees can absorb

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — A new analysis of fire activity in Alaska’s Yukon Flats finds that so many forest fires are occurring there that the area has become a net exporter of carbon to the atmosphere. This is worrisome, the researchers say, because arctic and subarctic boreal forests like those of the Yukon Flats contain roughly one-third of the Earth’s terrestrial carbon stores.

The research is reported in the journalNature Climate Change.

Researchers studied fire activity in a 2,000-square kilometer region of the Yukon Flats in Alaska. The study area lies within the white rectangle on the map. Zones burned in Alaska since 1950 are in red.

 

Graphic by Diana Yates (Alaska Fire Service data)

Delete

Edit embedded media in the Files Tab and re-insert as needed.

Alaska fire records go back only to 1939, and scientists often assume that present-day fire activity mirrors that of the ancient past. The researchers on the new study instead used actual fire data from a previous study in which they analyzed charcoal fragments preserved in lake sediments in the Yukon Flats. In that study, they found that fire frequency in a 2,000-kilometer swath of the Yukon Flats is higher today than at any time in the last 10,000 years.

For the new analysis, the team plugged its fire data into a computer model of carbon cycling in the study area.

“Having these data allowed us to simulate not only recent decades, but the entire past millennium of carbon cycling,” said Ryan Kelly, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Illinois who conducted the study with Feng Sheng Hu, a U. of I. professor of plant biology and of geology.

“Our model confirms our hypothesis that the recent increase in fire frequency in our study region has caused massive carbon losses to the atmosphere. About 12 percent of the total stored carbon has been lost in the last half century,” said Kelly, who now is a data scientist and modeler for Neptune and Company, Inc.

“Most studies of carbon cycling in boreal forests have been motivated by the fact that there’s just an enormous amount of carbon in these high-latitude ecosystems,” Hu said. “Up to 30 percent of the earth’s terrestrial carbon is in that system. And, simultaneously, this region is warming up faster than any other parts of the world.”

Increasing numbers of fires are unbalancing the cycle of carbon capture and release, the researchers report. More carbon dioxide in the atmosphere could enhance plant growth, but it also contributes to further climate warming in the higher latitudes, Kelly said.

“Such warming would likely be attended by increased wildfire activity, which would more than cancel out plants’ carbon uptake and lead to a net increase in atmospheric carbon dioxide,” he said.

The new findings challenge studies that assume that recent fire activity reflects the norm over thousands of years. Those assumptions would lead scientists to conclude that the region has been a net carbon sink in recent decades, the researchers said.

Replacing that assumption with actual fire data from the past millennium offers a starkly different picture of the carbon cycle in the Yukon Flats, they said.

“The effects of forest fires on the carbon cycle are very dramatic. Fires explain about 80 percent of the change in carbon storage over the past millennium, and a large amount of carbon has been lost from this ecosystem because of increasing forest fires,” Hu said. “This area has burned more than any other place in the boreal forests of North America. We chose the area for this study because we thought it could be an early indicator of the future.”

The researchers see a troubling trend, in which climate warming increases the number of fires, which release more carbon to the atmosphere and enhance warming.

“Boreal forests contain vast carbon stocks that make them inherently big players in the global carbon cycle,” Kelly said. “And the main way that this stored carbon is eventually released is through fire.”

 

 

Editor’s notes:

To reach Feng Sheng Hu, call 217-244-2982; email fhu@illinois.edu.
To reach Ryan Kelly, email rkelly@life.illinois.edu.

The paper “Paleodata-informed modeling of large carbon losses from recent burning of boreal forests” is available online or from the U. of I. News Bureau.

 



This article was imported from a previous version of the News Bureau website. Please email news@illinois.edu to report missing photos and/or photo credits.

Read Next

Announcements

Wright selected as U. of I.’s vice chancellor for advancement

Dale Wright, currently the interim vice chancellor for advancement at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, will become the permanent vice chancellor for advancement and senior vice president of the University of Illinois Foundation, pending approval by the University of Illinois Board of Trustees. Until approved by the Board of Trustees, his title will be vice […]

Health and Medicine Sara Gerke, the Richard W. & Marie L. Corman Scholar at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and expert in legal issues surrounding cutting-edge medical developments.

New paper urges caution as FDA plans to phase out animal testing in drug development

Replacing animal testing with alternate methodologies in preclinical drug trials holds potential for the development of cheaper, safer pharmaceuticals, but such a novel approach needs to be implemented judiciously and with caution.

Humanities Diptych image with the book cover of "Indifferent Cities" and a photo of Angel Garcia.

Illinois English professor explores his lost family history in new poetry collection

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Poet Ángel García examines his disrupted family lineage in his new collection of poetry, seeking answers about where he came from and trying to fill the many gaps in his family’s story. “Indifferent Cities” is the second book by García, a University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign English professor. The book was the winner […]

Strategic Communications and Marketing News Bureau

507 E. Green St
MC-426
Champaign, IL 61820

Email: stratcom@illinois.edu

Phone (217) 333-5010