Prescribed fire as a means of reducing forest carbon emissions in the western United States

Wiedinmyer, C; Hurteau, MD

HERO ID

387644

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2010

Language

English

PMID

20148581

HERO ID 387644
In Press No
Year 2010
Title Prescribed fire as a means of reducing forest carbon emissions in the western United States
Authors Wiedinmyer, C; Hurteau, MD
Journal Environmental Science & Technology
Volume 44
Issue 6
Page Numbers 1926-1932
Abstract Carbon sequestration by forested ecosystems offers a potential climate change mitigation benefit. However, wildfire has the potential to reverse this benefit. In the western United States, climate change and land management practices have led to increases in wildfire intensity and size. One potential means of reducing carbon emissions from wildfire is the use of prescribed burning, which consumes less biomass and therefore releases less carbon to the atmosphere. This study uses a regional fire emissions model to estimate the potential reduction in fire emissions when prescribed burning is applied in dry, temperate forested systems of the western U.S. Daily carbon dioxide (CO(2)) fire emissions for 2001-2008 were calculated for the western U.S. for two cases: a default wildfire case and one in which prescribed burning was applied. Wide-scale prescribed fire application can reduce CO(2) fire emissions for the western U.S. by 18-25% in the western U.S., and by as much as 60% in specific forest systems. Although this work does not address important considerations such as the feasibility of implementing wide-scale prescribed fire management or the cumulative emissions from repeated prescribed burning, it does provide constraints on potential carbon emission reductions when prescribed burning is used.
Doi 10.1021/es902455e
Pmid 20148581
Wosid WOS:000275325600010
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English