Long-term historical time series records of fire activity (number of fires and total area burned) extending back to the late 1800s, that are very rare worldwide, were found and used within the GRADIENT project that correspond to (i) Switzerland, central Europe (1900-2014), (ii) Greece, south Europe (1897-2014), (iii) Algeria, north Africa (1870-2014) and (iv) Tunisia (1902-2015), north Africa which together with the spatial-explicit reconstruction of recent fire history from Landsat satellite images (1984-2016), gave a unique and excellent opportunity to understand fire, weather and land use/land cover (LULC) interactions in a north to south transect. The Tunisia study case was added during the implementation period of the project since in the original proposal only the first three study cases were proposed.
Differences in bio-geographical characteristics provided by the four selected study areas, located on a large geographical gradient covering two continents gave the opportunity to document the role of fire in different biomes, to explore cross-scale issues and assess how fire-weather-LULC interactions vary across different scales, especially under a climate change context. GRADIENT project consisted of three topics that correspond mainly to three different scales. The specific objectives were: (i) the identification of trends, patterns and relationships between forest fires, weather, land cover and socio-economic variables from long-term observations, (ii) the reconstruction of recent fire history and the assessment of burning patterns and fire selectivity on an annual basis from satellite images, and (iii) the exploration of post-fire vegetation dynamics and recovery for selected large fire events using time series satellite images.