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Linking fire and climate : interactions with land use, vegetation, and soil
Author
Dube, Opha Pauline
Publisher
Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability
Publication Year
2009
Body

Literature shows that at a global scale, fire activity increased from the Last Glacial Maximum to the present. There is incremental evidence indicating that climate defines the regional boundary conditions for fire. Human influence on ignitions depends on climate and has, since prehistoric times, resulted in significant changes on vegetation and soil, some of which require greater attention in the light of anthropogenic climate change. Climatic conditions have been used to identify regions where fire patterns are (i) human controlled, (ii) constrained by fuel and (iii) limited by rainfall seasonality. At regional and local scales, the fire-climate relationship is distorted by the interactions of fire, vegetation, and land use, and this, combined with annual to decadal climatic variability since late Holocene, results in high spatial and temporal variations in fire regimes.

Language
English
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Journal Issue/Article
Journal Volume
1
Journal Number
2
Journal Pages
161-169
Collection
Southern Africa Collection
Journal Name
Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability
Keywords
palaeoecology
fire ecology
climate change