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Data from: Contemporary fires are less frequent but more severe in dry conifer forests of the southwestern United States

dataset
posted on 2025-12-23, 23:41 authored by Emma McClure
<p>Wildfires in the southwestern United States are increasingly frequent and severe, but whether these trends exceed historical norms remains contested. Here we combine dendroecological records, satellite-derived burn severity, and field measured tree mortality to compare historical (1700-1880) and contemporary (1985-2020) fire regimes at tree-ring fire-scar sites in Arizona and New Mexico. We found that contemporary fire frequency, including recent, record fire years, is still <20% of historical levels. Since 1985, the fire return interval averages 58.8 years, compared to 11.4 years before 1880. Fire severity, however, has increased. At sites where trees historically survived many fires over centuries, 42% of recent fires resulted in high tree mortality. Suppressed wildfires tended to burn more severely than prescribed burns and fire use wildfires. These findings suggest that expanded use of low-severity prescribed and managed fire would help restore forest resilience and historical fire regimes in southwestern dry conifer forests.</p>

Funding

USDA-FS

History

Related Materials

Data contact name

McClure, Emma

Data contact email

emma_mcclure@nps.gov

Publisher

Dryad

Theme

  • Not specified

ISO Topic Category

  • biota

National Agricultural Library Thesaurus terms

dendroecology; growth rings; conifers; New Mexico; forests; fire severity; burn severity; Arizona; tree mortality; fire frequency

Pending citation

  • Yes

Public Access Level

  • Public