Understanding the Rise ofā¢ Zombie Fires
Historical Context andā Recent Trends
Reports of zombie ā¤fires date back to the 1940s, when they were rare. āHowever, in the āpast two decades, these ā¤fires have become more frequent and intense, coincidingā£ with āaccelerated warmingā£ in the Arctic.
Impact on Carbon Emissions
Arctic peat ā¢soilsā¢ trap more carbon than the ā¢entire atmosphere. ā¢These fires release ā¢gigatons of carbon into the air, raising concerns about the role ofā¤ sudden warming.
Key āFindings from Our Research
Mathematicalā Model Insights
We developed a mathematical model to exploreā how temperature ā£and carbonā¢ content in peatā£ soils respondā to weather andā climate changes. Our model also considers how certain microbes generate heat while breakingā£ down soil,ā releasing ā¢carbon into the ā¤atmosphere.
Two Remarkable Results
Our āresearch yielded two significantā¢ findings:
- Microbes can generate enough heat for underground peat to smolderā atā around ā80 degrees Celsius (176Ā°F) over winter,ā ready āto ignite inā£ spring. This can happen without any aboveground fireā or extreme weatherā conditions.
- A sudden transition āfromā¢ the regular coldā state to a hot metastable state ācan be triggered by realistic climate ā¤patterns, suchā¤ as summer heat waves and global warming. The rate of atmospheric temperature āincrease is crucial; a slower rate prevents the transition.
Real-World Implications
Whileā we haven’t proven this phenomenon in the real world ā¤or in a lab, similarā¤ eventsā¢ have beenā observed. Forā example, a large fire on āthe outskirts of London āduring a 2022 heatwave was likely ā£caused by spontaneously combusting compost.
“It is not the heat, it is the rate.”
Combatingā¢ Zombie Fires
Climate Change and Extreme Weather
Asā¤ theā climate āwarms, extreme weather conditions become more common, potentially leading āto more zombieā¢ fires. This creates a vicious cycle: carbonā¤ released fromā peatā soils worsens climate change, leading to more ā¤firesā and extreme weather.
Rate-Induced Tipping Points
Zombie fires exemplify a rate-induced tipping point, where rapidā¢ changes in external conditions cause a system to ātransition to an ā¢undesired state. Theā¢ contemporary āclimate mayā¤ be approachingāor ā£has already exceededādangerous rates of change ā¢for ā¢natural systems like bioactive peat soils.
Preventive Measures
To prevent further zombie fires, āwe mustā£ limit climate variability. Whileā£ policymakers often focus on atmospheric temperature levels, the ā¤rate of change could be equally or more important for short-term resilience.
6 Comments
So, are we now worried about zombie fires?
How did we jump from climate change to “zombie fires”?
And just when you thought 2020 was wild enough!
Arctic zombie fires?!
Hold up, zombie fires? What’s next, fire-breathing penguins?!
Whoa, zombie fires in the Arctic? That’s terrifying!