Selected Hawaiian language newspaper articles relating to wildfire from 1877 and 1901
收藏DataCite Commons2023-11-22 更新2024-07-13 收录
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https://www.sciencebase.gov/catalog/item/655d4291d34e3aa43a43361d
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Wildfire is a dominant ridge to reef threat to human and natural communities in the Hawaiian Islands, with impacts to natural and cultural resources and ecoystem services. Fire regimes in Hawai’i have shifted from very infrequent wildfire occurrence prior to human arrival to greatly increased frequency, intensity, and size over the past 100+ years, almost all of which is driven by anthropogenic ignitions and wildland fuels associated with invasive species, particularly grasses. Recent fire science has greatly increased understanding of contemporary drivers of fire in Hawaiʻi; however, the social dimensions and historical perspectives from Hawaiian language primary sources have not been integrated into synthetic understanding of fire in Hawaiʻi. The regional PICASC Future of Fire project focused on how Hawaiian language informs contemporary wildfire science in the Hawaiian Islands. The complexities of wildfire drivers, including anthropogenic ignitions, novel fuel types, and extreme heterogeneity in climate over short spatial scales, pose significant challenges to fire risk assessment and fire management, and conservation and restoration of endemic biodiversity. As island communities face increased wildfire risk due to climate change and continued plant invasion, collaborative bio-cultural stewardship approaches to adaptation and mitigation will be critical to wildfire management.
提供机构:
National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
创建时间:
2023-11-21



