The human dimension of fire regimes on Earth
University of Tasmania · State Street (United States) · +17 more institutions
Abstract
Humans and their ancestors are unique in being a fire-making species, but 'natural' (i.e. independent of humans) fires have an ancient, geological history on Earth. Natural fires have influenced biological evolution and global biogeochemical cycles, making fire integral to the functioning of some biomes. Globally, debate rages about the impact on ecosystems of prehistoric human-set fires, with views ranging from catastrophic to negligible. Understanding of the diversity of human fire regimes on Earth in the past, present and future remains rudimentary. It remains uncertain how humans have caused a departure from 'natural' background levels that vary with climate change. Available evidence shows that modern…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 26.34
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 119
Authors
18Topics & keywords
- Fire regime
- Biodiversity
- Ecosystem
- Biome
- Climate change
- Natural (archaeology)
- Geography
- Anthropocene