Analyzing
Extreme Disturbance Events: Fire in Los Padres National Forest
Max A. Moritz
Extreme
disturbance events may strongly influence the structure and functioning
of many ecosystems, particularly those in which large, infrequent
events are the defining forces within the region. This paper introduces
the extremal fire regime (i.e., the time series of the largest
fire per year) and the assumptions implicit in its analysis. I
describe the statistics of extremes and demonstrate their application
to the fire regime of Los Padres National Forest, California,
to compare two regions (i.e., Main and Monterey Divisions), to
test for a shift in fire regime due to fire suppression, and to
examine climatic events as a forcing mechanism for large fires.
Despite their similarity and proximity, the Main Division exhibited
a much higher frequency of large fires (and shorter return time)
compared to the Monterey Division. Comparison of time periods
1911-1950 and 1951-1991 indicated that fire suppression had no
effect on the distribution of very large fires in the Main Division,
although the frequency of fires smaller than ~4,000 ha declined.
Comparing distributions of an index for severity of Santa Ana
conditions (i.e., characterized by hot, dry winds) and extreme
fire events in the Main Division indicated a convergence of distributions
with increasing event size. The distribution of fire events larger
than ~4,000 ha appears to be coupled with that of severe Santa
Ana conditions, suggesting a strong climatic forcing for extreme
fires and a threshold for the transition from small- to large-fire
dynamics. Results indicate the usefulness of extremal fire regime
analysis for comparisons over space and time and for examining
a potential forcing mechanism. This approach can be applied to
any disturbance regime in which large events play an important
role, providing ecologists and land managers a useful tool for
understanding and predicting dynamics of extreme disturbance events.