北方的
环境科学
地理
气象学
大气科学
考古
地质学
作者
Bo Zheng,Philippe Ciais,Frédéric Chevallier,Hui Yang,Josep G. Canadell,Yang Chen,Ivar R. van der Velde,Ilse Aben,Emilio Chuvieco,Steven J. Davis,M. N. Deeter,Chaopeng Hong,Yawen Kong,Haiyan Li,Hui Lĭ,Xin Lin,Kebin He,Qiang Zhang
出处
期刊:Science
[American Association for the Advancement of Science]
日期:2023-03-02
卷期号:379 (6635): 912-917
被引量:156
标识
DOI:10.1126/science.ade0805
摘要
Extreme wildfires are becoming more common and increasingly affecting Earth's climate. Wildfires in boreal forests have attracted much less attention than those in tropical forests, although boreal forests are one of the most extensive biomes on Earth and are experiencing the fastest warming. We used a satellite-based atmospheric inversion system to monitor fire emissions in boreal forests. Wildfires are rapidly expanding into boreal forests with emerging warmer and drier fire seasons. Boreal fires, typically accounting for 10% of global fire carbon dioxide emissions, contributed 23% (0.48 billion metric tons of carbon) in 2021, by far the highest fraction since 2000. 2021 was an abnormal year because North American and Eurasian boreal forests synchronously experienced their greatest water deficit. Increasing numbers of extreme boreal fires and stronger climate-fire feedbacks challenge climate mitigation efforts.
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