Four-fold increase in solar forcing on snow in western U.S. burned forests since 1999

Gleason, KE; McConnell, JR; Arienzo, MM; Chellman, N; Calvin, WM

HERO ID

7310942

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2019

Language

English

PMID

31048696

HERO ID 7310942
In Press No
Year 2019
Title Four-fold increase in solar forcing on snow in western U.S. burned forests since 1999
Authors Gleason, KE; McConnell, JR; Arienzo, MM; Chellman, N; Calvin, WM
Journal Nature Communications
Volume 10
Page Numbers 2026
Abstract Forest fires are increasing across the American West due to climate warming and fire suppression. Accelerated snow melt occurs in burned forests due to increased light transmission through the canopy and decreased snow albedo from deposition of light-absorbing impurities. Using satellite observations, we document up to an annual 9% growth in western forests burned since 1984, and 5 day earlier snow disappearance persisting for >10 years following fire. Here, we show that black carbon and burned woody debris darkens the snowpack and lowers snow albedo for 15 winters following fire, using measurements of snow collected from seven forested sites that burned between 2002 and 2016. We estimate a 372 to 443% increase in solar energy absorbed by snowpacks occurred beneath charred forests over the past two decades, with enhanced post-fire radiative forcing in 2018 causing earlier melt and snow disappearance in >11% of forests in the western seasonal snow zone.
Doi 10.1038/s41467-019-09935-y
Pmid 31048696
Wosid WOS:000466458800003
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English