Government of Canada; Natural Resource…

Number of large fires (>200 hectares) - Short-term (2011-2040) under RCP 8.5

[Unnamed layer] [Unnamed layer] [Unnamed layer]
Service health Now:
Interface
Web Service, ArcGIS MapServer 10.3
Keywords
forest fires, climate change
Fees
unknown
Access constraints
Government of Canada; Natural Resources Canada; Canadian Forest Service
Data provider

Government of Canada; Natural Resources Canada; Earth Sciences Sector; Canada Centre for Mapping and Earth Observation (unverified)

Contact information:

Government of Canada; Natural Resources Canada; Earth Sciences Sector; Canada Centre for Mapping and Earth Observation

Ads by Google

"The fire regime describes the patterns of fire seasonality, frequency, size, spatial continuity, intensity, type (e.g., crown or surface fire) and severity in a particular area or ecosystem. The number of large fires refers to the annual number of fires greater than 200 hectares (ha) that occur per units of 100,000 ha. It was calculated per Homogeneous Fire Regime (HFR) zones. These HFR zones represent areas where the fire regime is similar over a broad spatial scale (Boulanger et al. 2014). Such zonation is useful in identifying areas with unusual fire regimes that would have been overlooked if fires had been aggregated according to administrative and/or ecological classifications. Fire data comes from the Canadian National Fire Database covering 1959–1999 (for HFR zones building) and 1959-1995 (for model building). Multivariate Adaptive Regression Splines (MARS) modeling was used to relate monthly fire regime attributes with monthly climatic/fire-weather in each HFR zone. Future climatic data were simulated using the Canadian Earth System Model version 2 (CanESM2) and downscaled at a 10 Km resolution using ANUSPLIN for two different Representative Concentration Pathways (RCP). RCPs are different greenhouse gas concentration trajectories adopted by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) for its fifth Assessment Report. RCP 2.6 (referred to as rapid emissions reductions) assumes that greenhouse gas concentrations peak between 2010-2020, with emissions declining thereafter. In the RCP 8.5 scenario (referred to as continued emissions increases) greenhouse gas concentrations continue to rise throughout the 21st century. Provided layer: projected number of large fires (>200 ha) across Canada for the short-term (2011-2040) under the RCP 8.5 (continued emissions increases)."

Available map layers (5)

Number of large fires - Reference Period [1981-2010] (0)

Number of large fires under RCP 8.5 - Short-term [2011-2040] (1)

Number of large fires under RCP 8.5 - Medium-term [2041-2070] (2)

Number of large fires under RCP 8.5 - Long-term [2071-2100] (3)

Number of large fires under RCP 2.6 - Long-term [2071-2100] (4)

There are currently no notifications for the service, click the feed icon to subscribe.