Changes in landscape fire-hazard during the second half of the 20th century: Agriculture abandonment and the changing role of driving factors
Abstract:
Past the middle of the 20th century, forest fires started to increase markedly in the Mediterranean countries of southern Europe. Hazardous land-use and land-cover (LULC) changes are considered major drivers of increased fire-hazard and fire risk. However, the contribution of various LULC changes to increased fire-hazard, as well as the role of environmental or socioeconomic factors in driving them, including its changing role over time, are poorly known. Understanding how changes in socio-economics in interaction with other factors modify landscape fire-hazard and risk is a major priority in fire-prone areas. Here we determined changes in fire-hazard through time, focusing on the contribution of agriculture abandonment to it, and on the changing role of its driving factors, in a large (56,000 km2) rural area in West-Central Spain. The study period covers from 1950s to 2000. LULC maps at different time steps (1950s, 1978, 1986 and 2000) were available, as well as environmental and socioeconomic information at various scales. We analyzed trends in LULC change, focusing on those altering fire-hazard, and used general linear models (GLM) with generalized linear mixed models (GLMM) to account for the effects of variables at different spatial scales in determining changes leading to shifts in fire-hazard. We found that the proportion of hazardous LULC types increased twofold (26-42%) from 1950s to 2000. Until 1986, agriculture abandonment was the dominant LULC change leading to increased fire-hazard. Post-1986, LULC changes were mainly driven by deforestation due to fires and densification caused by natural vegetation dynamics. Models showed that the first abandoned lands were driven by local environmental and socioeconomic constraints (small farms, in distant locations, in municipalities with low population), whereas later abandonments were driven by non-local ones (large farms, in more productive soils, closer to towns, populations with high unemployment, and higher employment in the services sector). Throughout the entire period, high proportion of wildland vegetation, low mechanization level, and large number of land-holders older than 55 years favored abandonment. This implies that as the population ages, larger, more accessible and productive areas are abandoned, fire-hazard will increase closer to human settlements, increasing the wild-land urban interface and fire risk.
Año de publicación:
2015
Keywords:
- Land-use land-cover changes
- Non-stationary
- Multilevel models
- global change
- Fire risk
- Agriculture abandonment
- Fire-hazard
Fuente:
Tipo de documento:
Article
Estado:
Acceso restringido
Áreas de conocimiento:
- Servicios ecosistémicos
- Ecología
- Geografía
Áreas temáticas:
- Agricultura y tecnologías afines
- Economía de la tierra y la energía
- Historia de África