Regional wildfire smoke reduces boreal forest carbon uptake

While many studies have examined carbon dynamics of boreal ecosystems following wildfire, research on forest-atmosphere carbon fluxes during widespread smoke events from adjacent active wildfires is limited. We examined eddy covariance carbon exchange adjacent to the May 2011 Utikuma Complex wildfir...

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Main Authors: B Van Huizen, D K Thompson, S L Wilkinson, R M Petrone, L E Chasmer, N Kljun, M D Flannigan, K J Devito, J M Waddington
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IOP Publishing 2025-01-01
Series:Environmental Research Communications
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1088/2515-7620/adf498
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Summary:While many studies have examined carbon dynamics of boreal ecosystems following wildfire, research on forest-atmosphere carbon fluxes during widespread smoke events from adjacent active wildfires is limited. We examined eddy covariance carbon exchange adjacent to the May 2011 Utikuma Complex wildfire in central Alberta, Canada. Over a one-week period while the wildfire was burning <10 km from the flux footprint of the tower, net ecosystem CO _2 exchange decreased to almost zero, likely due to smoke-related reductions in photosynthetically active radiation greatly diminishing photosynthesis. The smoke event caused a direct reduction in forest CO _2 sequestration by 0.7 Tg CO _2 during the fire period. As the smoke affected area was 120 times greater than the burnt area itself, this additional carbon reduction was equivalent to ~30% of gross carbon emissions from the fire. We argue that smoke-related inhibition of photosynthesis via reduced light availability should be considered when investigating the net impacts of high-intensity boreal wildfires on the net radiative forcing and global carbon balance.
ISSN:2515-7620