Defining pyromes and global syndromes of fire regimes

University of the Witwatersrand · Council for Scientific and Industrial Research · +4 more institutions

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Fire is a ubiquitous component of the Earth system that is poorly understood. To date, a global-scale understanding of fire is largely limited to the annual extent of burning as detected by satellites. This is problematic because fire is multidimensional, and focus on a single metric belies its complexity and importance within the Earth system. To address this, we identified five key characteristics of fire regimes--size, frequency, intensity, season, and extent--and combined new and existing global datasets to represent each. We assessed how these global fire regime characteristics are related to patterns of climate, vegetation (biomes), and human activity. Cross-correlations demonstrate that only certain…

Citation impact

812
total citations
FWCI
26.05
Percentile
100%
References
56
Citations per year

Authors

4

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Biome
  • Fire ecology
  • Fire regime
  • Vegetation (pathology)
  • Environmental science
  • Climatology
  • Climate change
  • Ecology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Climate action
No related works found for this paper.

Funding