Impact of Topography and Climate on Post-fire Vegetation Recovery Across Different Burn Severity and Land Cover Types through Machine Learning
Faria Tuz Zahura, Gautam Bisht, Zhi Li, Sarah McKnight, Xingyuan, Chen

TL;DR
This study uses machine learning to analyze how topography and climate influence post-wildfire vegetation recovery across different land cover types in the Pacific Northwest, providing insights for targeted forest management.
Contribution
It introduces a machine learning approach to quantify the effects of topography and climate on vegetation recovery across various land cover types after wildfires.
Findings
Climate variables, especially precipitation and temperature, are key drivers of vegetation recovery.
Elevation significantly influences recovery among topographic factors.
Vegetation recovery is reduced under lower precipitation conditions across land cover types.
Abstract
Wildfire significantly disturb ecosystems by altering forest structure, vegetation ecophysiology, and soil properties. Understanding the complex interactions between topographic and climatic conditions in post-wildfire recovery is crucial. This study investigates the interplay between topography, climate, burn severity, and years after fire on vegetation recovery across dominant land cover types (evergreen forest, shrubs, and grassland) in the Pacific Northwest region. Using Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer data, we estimated vegetation recovery by calculating the incremental enhanced vegetation index (EVI) change during post-fire years. A machine learning technique, random forest (RF), was employed to map relationships between the input features (elevation, slope, aspect, precipitation, temperature, burn severity, and years after fire) and the target (incremental EVI…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFire effects on ecosystems · Landslides and related hazards
