Boreal Forest Fire Causes Daytime Surface Warming During Summer to
Exceed Surface Cooling During Winter in North America
Abstract
Boreal wildfires impact surface climates with consequences for plant
physiology, permafrost thaw, and carbon fluxes. Post-fire temperatures
vary over decades due to successional changes in vegetation structure
and composition. Yet, the underlying biophysical drivers remain
uncertain. Here, we quantify surface climate changes following fire
disturbances in the North American boreal forest and identify its
dominant biophysical drivers. To do so, we analyse multi-year
land-atmosphere energy exchange and satellite observations from across
Canada and Alaska. We find post-fire daytime land surface temperatures
to be substantially warmer for about five decades while winter
temperatures are slightly cooler. Post-fire decadal changes are
characterised by a decrease in leaf area index during the first decade,
a sharp increase in snow cover period surface albedo, and a decrease in
the efficiency of heat transfer for about 2-3 decades. Evaporative
fraction increases in the first three decades before returning to lower
values again. We find that warming is mainly explained by a decrease in
the efficiency of heat transfer while cooling is additionally explained
by increasing surface albedo. We estimate that current daytime surface
temperatures of the boreal biome of Canada are 0.18 °C warmer in the
summer and 0.04 °C cooler during the winter due to fire. For a scenario
with a strong increase in burned area, we estimate doubled warming from
fire until 2050. Our study highlights the potential for accelerated
surface warming in the boreal biome with increasing wildfire activity
and disentangles the biophysical drivers of fire-related surface climate
impacts.