Please choose your delivery country and your customer group
Savannas consist of a continuous layer of grass interspersed with scattered trees or shrubs and cover approx. 10 million square kilometers of tropical Africa. Little is know about the frequency and location of these fires and the area burned each year. Emission from the African savannas burning are known to be transported over the mid-Atlantic, south Pacific and Indian Oceans; but to study fully the transport of regional savanna burning and the seasonality of the atmospheric circulation must be considered simultaneously. Here we describe the temporal and spatial distribution of savanna fires over the entire African continent, as determined from night-time satellite imagery. We find that, contrary to expectations, most fires are left to burn uncontrolled, so that there is no strong diurnal cycle in the fire frequency. The knowledge gained from this study regarding the distribution and variability of fires will aid monitoring of the climatically important trace gases emitted from burning biomass.