Understanding the impact of fire requires detailed knowledge about where fi
res occur, how they alter landscape patterns, and precise calculations of f
ire regime parameters. In this work, a reconstruction of the perimeters of
fires that occurred during 1970-1990 was made by means of aerial photograph
s aided by field inspection in a 14km x 14km study area located in the sout
hern slopes of Sierra de Gredos (Central Spain). Yearly fire perimeters, to
pographic attributes (slope, aspect and elevation) and the forest territory
limits were incorporated to, and analyzed by means of, a raster-based GIS.
The perimeters of 75 fires greater than or equal to4 ha were mapped, which
were approximately 13% of the total number occur-red but accounted for 95%
of the area burned. During this time, nearly 33% of the forest territory w
as burned and 22% of it was burned twice or more. Burning was not random in
relation to topography, either when occurred for the first time or subsequ
ently. Fires tended to aggregate spatially, which produced a set of increas
ingly larger interconnected burned patches. The fire rotation period was 51
years. A spatially explicit calculation of this parameter yielded 64 years
, while for the areas that burned for the first time, in 15 years 50% of th
e area had burned again. Moreover, over half of the pine woodlands were 25
years old or older when they burned, while half of the reburned areas were
less than 6 years old. These results indicate that fires, by concentrating
in specific places, and by becoming more frequent in areas already burned c
ould produce greater impacts than suspected and could further contribute to
increase fire incidence in the area. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All ri
ghts reserved.