Smoke rises from the Bobcat Fire, which burned more than 115,000 acres
(46,539 hectares) in Southern California’s San Gabriel Mountains in 2020. In
the months before the fire, NASA’s ECOSTRESS passed over the area aboard the
International Space Station, collecting data on plant water use. Credits:
NASA
NASA’s ECOSTRESS Sees Las Vegas Streets
Turn Up the Heat
NASA’s ECOSTRESS Detects ‘Heat
Islands’ in Extreme Indian Heat Wave
A new study uses
data from the ECOSTRESS instrument aboard the space station to better
understand why some parts of a wildfire burn more intensely than others.
Even in drought-stricken California, not
all areas face the same degree of wildfire risk. A recent study featuring data
from NASA’s ECOSTRESS mission found relationships between the intensity of a
wildfire and the water stress in plants measured in the months before the
blaze. The correlations weren’t just a matter of dry plants burning more than
hydrated ones; some areas where vegetation had sufficient water burned more
severely, possibly because fires had more fuel to consume.
The research, led by scientists at NASA’s
Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California, draws on plant water-use data
collected by ECOSTRESS, short for the ECOsystem and Spaceborne
Thermal Radiometer Experiment on Space Station. The instrument measures the
temperature of plants as they heat up when they run out of water. For this
study, researchers focused on data collected during portions of 2019 and early
2020 over six areas – three in Southern California mountains and three in the
Sierra Nevada – that were subsequently scorched by wildfires.
Other research has shown that wildfire
season across the Western U.S. is starting earlier in the year and increasing
in length and severity. In California – a state with 33 million acres (13
million hectares) of forests, much of it managed by federal, state, and local
agencies – detailed insights on the relationship between wildfire and the
availability of water to vegetation could help fire-management officials
identify not just whether an area will likely catch fire, but how serious the
damage will be if it does.
“We are in an intense megadrought – the
worst in 1,200 years – and it’s creating conditions for more catastrophic
fires,” said Christine Lee, a study co-author at JPL. “Data sets like those
from ECOSTRESS will be critical for advancing science and can provide
information to support those who are responding to climate-change crises.”
Comparing the ECOSTRESS data with separate
postfire satellite imagery, researchers found that the rate at which plants
release water by “sweating” – a process known as evapotranspiration – as well
as how efficiently they use water for photosynthesis, can help predict whether
subsequent wildfires are more or less intense. Both measures indicate whether a
plant community is getting enough water or is under stress from lack of it.
“We were trying to understand what drives
differences in why some areas have severe burns and other areas don’t,” said
Madeleine Pascolini-Campbell, a water and ecosystems scientist at JPL and lead
author of the paper. “The results show how crucial water stress is for
predicting which areas burn the most and why it’s important to monitor vegetation
in these regions.”
Tracking
Plant Stress
Like humans, plants struggle to function
when they’re too hot. And in much the same way that sweating helps humans stay
cool, plants rely on evapotranspiration to regulate their temperature.
Evapotranspiration combines the rate at which plants lose water as it
evaporates from the soil and by transpiration, in which they release water
through openings in their leaves, called stomates. To avoid losing too much
water, plants start closing their stomates if they get too dry.
“As a result, they start to heat up
because they don’t have the benefit of ‘sweating’ anymore,” Lee said. “With
ECOSTRESS, we can observe these really fine changes in temperature, which are
used to understand changes in evapotranspiration and water-use efficiency.”
In general, slower evapotranspiration and
lower efficiency signal that plants are water-stressed. Higher values indicate
that plants are getting enough water.
ECOSTRESS tracks evapotranspiration via a
high-resolution thermal radiometer that can measure the temperature of patches
of Earth’s surface as small as 130 by 230 feet (40 by 70 meters).
High
Versus Low Stress
In the paper, published in Global Ecology
and Biogeography, researchers found that water-stress-related variables, along
with elevation, were dominant predictors of burn severity in areas struck by
three Southern California wildfires in 2020: the Bobcat Fire in the Angeles
National Forest, along with the Apple and El Dorado fires in the San Bernardino
National Forest.
Whether higher or lower stress predicted
more severe burning depended on the primary type of vegetation in an area,
Pascolini-Campbell said. For example, stressed pine forests tended to burn more
severely, suggesting that drier conditions made trees more flammable. Meanwhile,
in grasslands, lower stress tended to correlate with more burn damage, a
possible indication that robust vegetation growth produced more fuel, resulting
in more intense blazes. And in the Sierra Nevada regions burned by the Creek
Fire, the Sequoia Complex Fire, and the North Complex Fire, results showed
weaker relationships between pre-fire stress and burn severity. The study
authors hypothesize that variables not captured in the analysis – wind or other
weather conditions – were more influential in those burn areas.
Supporting
Decision-Makers
The study comes as NASA is ramping up
efforts to mobilize its technology, expertise, and resources to study
wildfires. The agency in May announced the formation of NASA Wildland FireSense, an initiative aimed at bringing together
experts from different disciplines, along with advanced technology and
analytical tools, to develop approaches that can inform and guide fire
management decision-makers.
The importance of tools such as ECOSTRESS,
which is scheduled to operate until September 2023, will grow as climate change
drives greater wildfire risk across the Western U.S., Pascolini-Campbell said.
“It’s a high-priority region for using these types of studies to see which areas
are the most vulnerable,” she added.
More
About the Mission
JPL, a division of Caltech in Pasadena,
built and manages the ECOSTRESS mission for the Earth Science Division in the
Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington. ECOSTRESS is an
Earth Venture Instrument mission; the program is managed by NASA’s Earth System
Science Pathfinder program at the agency’s Langley Research Center in Hampton,
Virginia.
More information about ECOSTRESS is
available here: https://ecostress.jpl.nasa.gov/
Source: NASA
Data on Plant ‘Sweating’ Could Help Predict Wildfire Severity | NASA
No comments:
Post a Comment