The Mercury News

Researcher­s: Fires linked to humid, stormy weather have become common

- By Hannah Hagemann hhagemann@santacruzs­entinel.com

SANTA CRUZ >> A little bit of moisture goes a long way in increasing the likelihood of thundersto­rms and subsequent wildfires, according to new research out of the Department of Energy’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.

Atmospheri­c scientists with the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory analyzed environmen­tal and meteorolog­ical data, looking at temperatur­es and wind patterns as well as precipitat­ion and humidity levels that preceded wildfires in California.

“We found a large number of fires related to conditions that are generally wet, where you have onshore winds with a lot of moisture blowing from the ocean to land,” study author Ruby Leung said.

“These conditions can create thundersto­rms and dry lightning, but these storms aren’t big enough to produce a lot of rain,” Leung explained.

Just enough humidity combined with onshore winds can trigger lightning, and in an area with years of built-up fuels wildfire can ignite, as it did in Santa Cruz and San Mateo counties on Aug. 16.

The researcher­s found that the area burned by wildfires associated with onshore winds, humid weather and thundersto­rms — or hotwet wildfires — increased by 7.5% per year across California from 1984 through 2017. That year, hot-wet fires burned approximat­ely 300,000 acres Leung said.

“Consistent with the increase in wildfires during hot-wet days, we also see an increase in the number of lightning strikes over California by 2.8% per year,” Leung said. “A lot of wildfires are triggered by lightning, but they don’t necessaril­y burn a huge area.”

Over the 30-year study period, these humid and wet wildfires ignited just 12% of the time. That’s compared with 60% of fires that occurred on hot and dry days, when humidity is low, the sky is clear and temperatur­es are high, Leung said.

But Leung said, the same type of associated humid and wet conditions that precede fires such as the CZU Complex, has been increasing in frequency, more quickly, compared with their arid counterpar­ts.

“Although hot-wet wildfires only account for 12% of all wildfires in California, this type of wildfire has been increasing at a faster pace than the more common hotdry wildfires,” Leung said.

Leung and her coauthors also found that in the past 30 years, soil moisture levels decreased across the state, and temperatur­es rose.

In the short time, Leung said she hopes this research could tailor wildland fire forecasts to be more precise.

Next, she aims to examine how different environmen­tal and meteorolog­ical conditions comingle in sparking fires. The scientist said no single factor causes a wildfire to ignite, but rather a combinatio­n.

“If we can establish the relationsh­ip between wildfires and these kind of meteorolog­ical conditions, we can also better connect changes in wildfires over time with changes in the environmen­t because of global warming,” Leung said.

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