Hydroclimatic and Land Use Drivers of Wildfire Risk in the Colombian Caribbean

Camargo Caicedo, Yiniva; Bolaño-Diaz, Sindy; Pomares-Meza, Geraldine M.; Pérez-Pérez, Manuel; Drissa Soro, Tionhonkélé; Bolaño-Ortiz, Tomás R.; Vélez-Pereira, Andrés M.

Keywords: hotspots, land cover, burned area, fire density, hydroclimatic indices

Abstract

Fire-driven land cover change has generated a paradox: while habitat fragmentation from agriculture, livestock, and urban expansion has reduced natural fire occurrences, human-induced ignitions have increased wildfire frequency and intensity. In northern Colombia’s Magdalena Department, most of the territory faces moderate to high wildfire risk, especially during recurrent dry seasons and periods of below-average precipitation. However, knowledge of wildfire spatiotemporal occurrence and its drivers remains scarce. This work addresses this gap by identifying fire-prone zones and analyzing the influence of climate and vegetation in the Magdalena Department. Fire-prone zones were identified using the Getis–Ord Gi* method over fire density and burned area data from 2001 to 2023; then, they were analyzed with seasonally aggregated hydroclimatic indices via logistic regression to quantify their influence on wildfires. Vegetation susceptibility was assessed using geostatistics, obtaining land cover types most affected by fire and their degree of fragmentation. Fire-prone zones in the Magdalena Department covered ~744.35 km2 (3.21%), with a weak but significant (τ = 0.20, p < 0.01) degree of coincidence between classification based on fire density, as pre-fire variable, and burned area, as a post-fire variable. Temporally, fire probability increased during the dry season, driven by short-lagged precursors such as Dry Spell Length and precipitation from the preceding wet season. Fire-prone zones were dominated by pastures (62.39%), grasslands and shrublands (19.61%) and forests (15.74%), and exhibited larger, more complex high-risk patches, despite similar spatial connectedness with non-fire-prone zones. These findings enhance wildfire vulnerability understanding, contributing to risk-based territorial planning.

Más información

Título de la Revista: FIRE JOURNAL
Volumen: 8
Número: 6
Editorial: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI)
Fecha de publicación: 2025
Página de inicio: 1
Página final: 20
Idioma: Ingles
URL: https://www.mdpi.com/2571-6255/8/6/221
DOI:

10.3390/fire8060221

Notas: WOS Core collection ISI