Canadian Forests Are More Conducive to High-Severity Fires in Recent Decades

This paper investigates the factors influencing wildfire burn severity across Canada. Using statistical models applied to environmental data from 1981 to 2020, the authors identify fuel aridity as the most significant driver of how severely forests burn. Their analysis reveals that northern regions and summer months are particularly prone to high-severity fires, and they found a concerning trend of increasingly favorable conditions for severe burning in recent decades, particularly in spring and autumn. The study concludes that changing climates are making Canadian forests more susceptible to intense fires, highlighting the need for improved fire management and preparedness strategies.

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University of British Columbia

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Author W. Wang, X. Wang, M. D. Flannigan, L. Guindon, T. Swystun, D. Castellanos-Acuna, W. Wu, G. Wang
Publication Year 2025
License Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives
Last Updated October 9, 2025, 21:16 (UTC)
Created October 9, 2025, 21:15 (UTC)