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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Annually, millions of hectares of land are affected by wildfires worldwide, disrupting ecosystems functioning by
affecting on-site vegetation, soil, and above- and belowground biodiversity, but also triggering erosive off-site
impacts such as water-bodies contamination or mudflows. Here, we present a soil erosion assessment
following the 2017’s wildfires at the European scale, including an analysis of vegetation recovery and soil erosion
mitigation potential. Results indicate a sharp increase in soil losses with 19.4 million Mg additional erosion in the
first post-fire year when compared to unburned conditions. Over five years, 44 million Mg additional soil losses
were estimated, and 46% of the burned area presented no signs of full recovery. Post-fire mitigation could
attenuate these impacts by 63–77%, reducing soil erosion to background levels by the 4th post-fire year. Our
insights may help identifying target policies to reduce land degradation, as identified in the European Union Soil,
Forest, and Biodiversity strategies.Annually, millions of hectares of land are affected by wildfires worldwide, disrupting ecosystems functioning by
affecting on-site vegetation, soil, and above- and belowground biodiversity, but also triggering erosive off-site
impacts such as water-bodies contamination or mudflows. Here, we present a soil erosion assessment
following the 2017’s wildfires at the European scale, including an analysis of vegetation recovery and soil erosion
mitigation potential. Results indicate a sharp increase in soil losses with 19.4 million Mg additional erosion in the
first post-fire year when compared to unburned conditions. Over five years, 44 million Mg additional soil losses
were estimated, and 46% of the burned area presented no signs of full recovery. Post-fire mitigation could
attenuate these impacts by 63–77%, reducing soil erosion to background levels by the 4th post-fire year. Our
insights may help identifying target policies to reduce land degradation, as identified in the European Union Soil,
Forest, and Biodiversity strategies.
Description
Keywords
Post-fire Soil erosion RUSLE Ecosystem services Mitigation
Pedagogical Context
Citation
D.C.S. Vieira, P. Borrelli, D. Jahanianfard, A. Benali, S. Scarpa, P. Panagos, Wildfires in Europe: Burned soils require attention, Environmental Research, Volume 217, 2023, 114936
Publisher
Elsevier
