JpGU-AGU Joint Meeting 2026

Session information

[E] Oral

M (Multidisciplinary and Interdisciplinary) » M-IS Intersection

[M-IS15] Wildfire as a geoecological driver in a changing climate

Wed. May 27, 2026 10:45 AM - 12:15 PM Exhibition Hall Special Setting (4) (Exhibition Hall 7&8, Makuhari Messe)

Chairperson:Furuichi Takahisa(Miyagi University of Education), McGuire Luke(Organization Not Listed), Hultquist Carolynne(University of Canterbury)

Wildfire is a major cross-disciplinary research theme in wildfire-prone regions, including the U.S., Canada, Australia, the Mediterranean, Africa and South America. The wildfire process causes fixed carbon in plant (wood) tissues to be released into atmosphere and the global mass of the released carbon by wildfire has affected global warming. On the other hand, the Japanese earth science community has contributed only limitedly through ad-hoc investigations after a few events, such as the 1961 and 1969 wildfires in the Pacific coastal mountains in the northeastern Japan (the Sanriku region), the 1968 wildfire in Edajima in western Japan (the Setouchi region), and the 1983 wildfires in the Tohoku region. In the spring of 2025, wildfire concurrently occurred in several places in Japan, including the Sanriku (Ohfunato) and Setouchi (Okayama and Imabari) regions. These events invited public attention to wildfire in Japan, presumably because they thought the wildfires were related to the present climate change and would occur more frequently, causing negative effects geoecologically and socially. Likewise, wildfire might have attracted only limited scientific attention in Asia, but, for instance, massive wildfire in peatlands in Indonesia has repeatedly occurred during the periods of drier climate according to the ENSO cycle. In the mainland Southeast Asia and Indian regions, extensive agricultural land-use have caused wildfire during the dry months and wildfire is an issue to be addressed for better management.

This session aims to widen assemblages of knowledge on wildfire by reviewing existing research and presenting ongoing investigations from wildfire-prone regions and also from less researched Asian regions, including Japan. A wide range of studies with perspectives typically from geomorphology, hydrology, meteorology, ecology, spatial-data science, social science and environmental engineering and also from other relevant subjects are welcomed.

11:45 AM - 12:00 PM

*Olivier Evrard1,2, Naoya Takahashi3, Iris Devaure1,2, Romain Ducruet1, Pierre-Alexis Chaboche1, Ingrid Lykke1,2, Yasunori Igarashi4, Anthony Foucher1 (1. French Atomic Energy Commission - University Paris-Saclay, 2. MITATE Lab, International Research Laboratory 2039, CNRS, CEA, Fukushima University, Fukushima (Japan), 3. Department of Earth Science, Tohoku University, Sendai (Japan), 4. Center for Research In Radiation, Isotopes, and Earth System Sciences, University of Tsukuba (Japan))

12:00 PM - 12:15 PM

*Michelle E Newcomer1, Ricardo González-Pinzón2, Erica R. Siirila-Woodburn1, Jasquelin Peña3,1, Jennifer Underwood4, Jackson Webster5, Andrew J. Whelton6, Jinwoo Im1, Deepta Paramasamy7, Craig Ulrich1, Newsha Ajami1, Rachel S. Meyer8, Kripa Jagannathan1, Shiyu Xin9, Molly Oshun9, Todd Schram9, Donald Seymour9, Stephen Maples9 (1. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, 2. University of New Mexico, 3. University of California, Davis, 4. U.S. Geological Survey, 5. California State University, Chico, 6. Purdue University, 7. Arizona State University, 8. University of California Santa Cruz, 9. Sonoma Water)

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