[MCN] Geophysical Research Letters 2025 -- Soil Moisture is a Stronger Predictor of Forest Fire Spread Potential Than Weather in the U.S. Northern Rocky Mountains

Lance Olsen lance at wildrockies.org
Thu Jan 15 16:41:30 EST 2026


Geophysical Research Letters 2025
 
Soil Moisture is a Stronger Predictor of Forest Fire Spread Potential Than Weather in the U.S. Northern Rocky Mountains 
 
Zachary A. Holden1 , Alan K. Swanson2 , Mojtaba Sadegh3 , Charles H. Luce4 , Erin Noonan‐Wright5 , and Russell A. Parsons1 
https://www.fs.usda.gov/rm/pubs_journals/2025/rmrs_2025_holden_z001.pdf
 
1 USDA Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Missoula, MT, USA, 2 Department of Community and Public Health, University of Montana, Missoula, MT, USA, 3 Department of Civil Engineering, Boise State University, Boise, ID, USA, 4 USDA Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Boise, ID, USA, 5 USDA Forest Service, Northern Region Fire & Aviation Management, Missoula, MT, USA 
 
Abstract 
 
Accurate prediction of forest fire spread is a critical management and scientific challenge as the world adapts to rapidly changing fire regimes. We reconstructed 5,400 daily burned area progression maps for 196 U.S. Northern Rocky Mountain wildfires (2012–2021) and used machine learning to estimate daily fire growth given local weather, hydroclimate, fuels and topography. Optimized models explained 36% of the variation in daily fire growth, increasing to 56% when an index of fire activity the previous day was included. Soil moisture and plant hydraulic stress were the dominant predictors of fire spread, increasing accuracy by 8%–9% over models with only fuel and weather. Wildfire danger forecasts and fire spread models in the U.S. use short‐ term weather indices and don't consider longer‐term drought. Our findings suggest that soil moisture and vegetation stress are critical indicators of fire spread potential in this region, with implications for fire modeling and prescribed burn planning. 

Plain Language Summary 

Forest fires have been increasingly affecting the western United States and many other regions worldwide. To support wildfire planning, mitigation and response efforts, researchers have developed a range of physics‐based and data‐driven models to simulate fire propagation. The majority of these models rely on weather conditions and fire danger indices for their predictions, without directly considering soil moisture and its influence on live fuel moisture. We mapped daily fire perimeters for 196 large forest fires from 2012 to 2021 using VIIRS satellite fire detections and statistical interpolation and used boosted regression tree models to estimate the effects of weather, fire danger, soil moisture and fuels on daily fire growth. Our results suggest that soil moisture‐related variables strongly influence daily fire growth and potential for large fire growth days. Additionally, our models indicated that inclusion of previous day active pixel counts —that is, adding memory to the fire propagation model—can markedly enhance model performance. Our findings highlight the crucial role of soil moisture in influencing forest fire spread, with significant implications for future mitigation and response efforts.


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“The changes experienced by the biosphere over the past century ... have raised concerns about the possibility of rapid shifts from green to desert states.”

Sole. Scaling laws in the drier. Nature 13 September 2007

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