Wildfires and tornadoes have a tangled relationship. Ontario researchers work to learn why
Western University researchers investigate why wildfire smoke affects storm intensity
As another wildfire season gets underway in Canada, researchers with the Northern Tornadoes Project (NTP) at Western Universityhave found a curious link between wildfires and tornadoes.
"One thing that we've noticed over the last few years is that when we have a really big fire year like last year,we tend to get less tornadoes," said David Sills, executive director of the NTP.
According to data from the London, Ont., university, Canada experienced a record-breaking 129 tornadoes in 2022. In 2023, amidthe worst wildfire seasonthis country has ever seen,there were just 86 twisters.
It's an unexpected parallel, one Sills said researchers have yet to fully understand.
There are theories, though.
Where there's smoke
"We get a lot more forest fire smoke that blows across the country when we get these big fire years," Sills said, "andhaving that smoke up there really cuts down on the amount of sunlight getting down to the groundand heating the ground,and providing instability for thunderstorms."
Last year, Canada saw some 18million hectares of its vast forests go up in smoke, resulting in eight deathsand tens of thousands of people fleeing their homes.As the fires burned,blankets of smoke drifted across the continent, smothering Canadian and U.S. citiesin an acrid fog so thick thatit rolled back decades of air-quality gains.
That continent-spanning veil of wood smoke, Sills said, seemsto have a diminishing effect on the size and power of thunderstorms.
"We saw that last year.There werethe same number of storms as usual, but their intensity was notably less. If that's the case, the chance of getting a tornado with a less intense storm is obviously less as well.
"So it might be an explanation for why we're getting less tornadoes when we think there's more fire going on."
Tornado activity is moving east
Connecting the dots between particularly intense wildfire seasons and how it affects weather across the continent might take some time, especially when researchers are noticing historical tornado patterns are shifting.
The NTPrecently created an online portal on40 years worth of scientifically collected information on tornadoesfrom 1980 to 2020, giving anyone withinternetaccess an unprecedented look at Canada's extreme weather.
"I think it's incredibly useful for scientists such as myself," said Geoff Coulson, a warning preparedness meteorologist with Environment Canada.
"The database contains lots of information about not only where tornadoes have occurred over the last number of decades, but the ratings, how long they've been, the width of the damage. ...lots of very useful information for people who want to dig around and learn more about the tornado risk in various parts of Canada."
The open data project has already shownCanada'sTornado Alleythe area of the country where twisters are most likely to occur has moved eastwards, from Saskatchewan to Ontario,in the last 20 years.
Coulson said that trend, along with the yet-to-be-understood relationship between wildfires and tornadoes, was clearly seen in last year's weather data.
Demystifying the wildfire-tornado link
"We notice it in Saskatchewan last year," Coulson said. "They only had one tornado in in 2023. So with all that fire,of course, thesmoke floating around, reflecting some sunlight that certainly can inhibit the activity.
"We'll have to see what happens this year."
This year, Canada is already seeing intensifying wildfire activity in part dueto a drought that's been intensified by a low snow pack over a warmer-than-usual winter.
Back at Western University, researchers with the NTP will be watching what kind of an effect, if any, this year's wildfire season will have on storms.
"We get asked all the time, 'Are more tornadoes occurring because of climate change?' andwe don't have a good answer at this point," Sills said.
"What's interesting about that is, things like droughts and wildfireswe know are connected to climate change. If we get more of these things, it may lead to less tornadoes over time due to climate change.
"So these are the things we have to untangle."