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Forest fragmentation, climate change and understory fire regimes on the Amazonian landscapes of the Xingu headwaters
Authors:Britaldo Soares-Filho  Rafaella Silvestrini  Daniel Nepstad  Paulo Brando  Hermann Rodrigues  Ane Alencar  Michael Coe  Charton Locks  Letícia Lima  Letícia Hissa  Claudia Stickler
Institution:1. Centro de Sensoriamento Remoto, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Av. Ant?nio Carlos, 6627, Belo Horizonte, MG, 31270-900, Brazil
2. Instituto de Pesquisa Ambiental da Amaz?nia???IPAM, Av. Nazar?? 669, Bel??m, PA, 66035-170, Brazil
3. The Woods Hole Research Center, 149 Woods Hole Road, Falmouth, MA, 02540-1644, USA
4. Alian?a da Terra, Av. das Ind??strias 601, Qd 151?CLt 47?CSala 203, Goiania, GO, 74670-600, Brazil
Abstract:Understory fire modeling is a key tool to investigate the cornerstone concept of landscape ecology, i.e. how ecological processes relate to landscape structure and dynamics. Within this context, we developed FISC??a model that simulates fire ignition and spread and its effects on the forest carbon balance. FISC is dynamically coupled to a land-use change model to simulate fire regimes on the Amazonian landscapes of the Xingu Headwaters under deforestation, climate change, and land-use management scenarios. FISC incorporates a stochastic cellular automata approach to simulate fire spread across agricultural and forested lands. CARLUC, nested in FISC, simulates fuel dynamics, forest regrowth, and carbon emissions. Simulations of fire regimes under modeled scenarios revealed that the major current and future driver of understory fires is forest fragmentation rather than climate change. Fire intensity proved closely related to the landscape structure of the remaining forest. While climate change may increase the percentage of forest burned outside protected areas by 30% over the next four decades, deforestation alone may double it. Nevertheless, a scenario of forest recovery and better land-use management would abate fire intensity by 18% even in the face of climate change. Over this time period, the total carbon balance of the Xingu??s forests varies from an average net sink of 1.6?ton?ha?1?year?1 in the absence of climate change, fire and deforestation to a source of ?0.1?ton?ha?1?year?1 in a scenario that incorporates these three processes.
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