Article
Sources of Anthropogenic Fire Ignitions on the Peat-Swamp Landscape in Kalimantan, Indonesia
Global Environmental Change
(2016)
Abstract
Fire disturbance in many tropical forests, including peat swamps, has become more frequent and extensive in recent decades. These fires compromise a variety of ecosystem services, among which mitigating global climate change through carbon storage is particularly important for peat swamps. Indonesia holds the largest amount of tropical peat carbon globally, and mean annual CO2 emissions from decomposition of deforested and drained peatlands and associated fires in Southeast Asia have been estimated at 2000 Mt y-1. A key component to understanding and therefore managing fire in the region is identifying the land use/land cover classes associated with fire ignitions. We assess the oft-asserted claim that escaped fires from oil palm concessions and smallholder farms near settlements are the primary sources of fire in a peat-swamp forest area in Central Kalimantan, Indonesia, equivalent to around a third of Kalimantan's total peat area. We use the MODIS Active Fire product from 2000 to 2010 to evaluate the fire origin and spread on the land use/land cover classes of legal, industrial oil palm concessions (the only type of legal concession in the study area), non-forest, and forest, as well as in relation to settlement proximity. We find that most fires (68–71%) originate in non-forest, compared to oil palm concessions (17%–19%), and relatively few (6–9%) are within 5 km of settlements. Moreover most fires started within oil palm concessions and in close proximity to settlements stay within those
boundaries (90% and 88%, respectively), and fires that do escape constitute only a small proportion of all
fires on the landscape (2% and 1%, respectively). Similarly, a small proportion of fire detections in forest
originate from oil palm concessions (2%) and within close proximity to settlements (2%). However, fire
ignition density in oil palm (0.055 ignitions km2
) is comparable to that in non-forest (0.060 km-2
ignitions km-2
), which is approximately ten times that in forest (0.006 ignitions km2
). Ignition density
within 5 km of settlements is the highest at 0.125 ignitions km2
. Furthermore, increased anthropogenic
activity in close proximity to oil palm concessions and settlements produces a detectable pattern of fire
activity. The number of ignitions decreases exponentially with distance from concessions; the number of
ignitions initially increases with distance from settlements, and, around from 7.2 km,then decreases with
distance from settlements. These results refute the claim that most fires originate in oil palm concessions,
and that fires escaping from oil palm concessions and settlements constitute a major proportion of fires
in this study region. However, there is a potential for these land use types to contribute substantially to
the fire landscape if their area expands. Effective fire management in this area should therefore target not
just oil palm concessions, but also non-forested, degraded areas where ignitions and fires escaping into
forest are most likely to occur.
Keywords
- disturbance,
- fire,
- human-environment coupled system,
- Indonesia,
- peat-swamp forest,
- wetlands
Disciplines
Publication Date
July, 2016
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2016.05.005
Citation Information
Cattau, Megan E.; Harrison, Mark E.; Shinyo, Iwan; Tungau, Sady; Uriarte, María; and DeFries, Ruth. (2016). "Sources of Anthropogenic Fire Ignitions on the Peat-Swamp Landscape in Kalimantan, Indonesia". Global Environmental Change, 39, 205-219. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2016.05.005