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Type: Journal Article
Author(s): James T. Randerson; Heping Liu; Mark G. Flanner; Scott D. Chambers; Yufang Jin; Peter G. Hess; Gabriele G. Pfister; Michelle C. Mack; Kathleen K. Treseder; Laura Welp; F. Stuart Chapin III; Jennifer W. Harden; Michael L. Goulden; E. Lyons; Jason C. Neff; Edward A.G. Schuur; Charles S. Zender
Publication Date: 2006

We report measurements and analysis of a boreal forest fire, integrating the effects of greenhouse gases, aerosols, black carbon deposition on snow and sea ice, and postfire changes in surface albedo. The net effect of all agents was to increase radiative forcing during the first year (34 +/- 31 Watts per square meter of burned area), but to decrease radiative forcing when averaged over an 80-year fire cycle (-2.3 +/- 2.2 Watts per square meter) because multidecadal increases in surface albedo had a larger impact than fire-emitted greenhouse gases. This result implies that future increases in boreal fire may not accelerate climate warming.

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Citation: Randerson, James T.; Liu, Heping; Flanner, M.; Chambers, Scott D.; Jin, Y.; Hess, P.G.; Pfister, Gabriele G.; Mack, Michelle C.; Treseder, Kathleen K.; Welp, Laura; Chapin III, F. Stuart; Harden, Jennifer W.; Goulden, Michael L.; Lyons, E.; Neff, Jason C.; Schuur, Edward A.G.; Zender, C. 2006. The impact of boreal forest fire on climate warming. Science 314(5802):1130-1132.

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Topics:
Regions:
Keywords:
  • albedo
  • black carbon
  • boreal forest
  • climate change
  • global warming
  • greenhouse gases
Record Last Modified:
Record Maintained By: FRAMES Staff (https://www.frames.gov/contact)
FRAMES Record Number: 4959