TY - JOUR
T1 - Historical range of wildfire regime in black pine forests outside actual target of public policies
AU - Badeau, Justin
AU - Fulé, Peter Z.
AU - Guibal, Frédéric
AU - Felix, Serena
AU - Burguet-Moretti, Amandine
AU - Moneglia, Pasquale
AU - Carcaillet, Christopher
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Authors
PY - 2025/11
Y1 - 2025/11
N2 - With global changes, disturbances including wildfires are expected to change, with consequences for ecosystems. The chief fire control policy of “fire suppression” aims to limit their numbers and areas. Mediterranean forest ecosystems have coevolved with fires, despite millennia of land use. Biota, climate and humans have long interacted to establish fire regimes in these socio-ecosystems. Sustainable fire stewardship should reconcile the protection of resources and people, while being realistic about the ability to limit all fires and preserving the ecological functions they provided. The past fire regime must be known and compared to the suppression objectives. We hypothesised that fires were infrequent and smaller, but with global changes in recent decades, they would be more frequent, and the burned areas would have increased. We addressed the fire regime (intervals, areas, season) in Corsican black pine forests, western Mediterranean, by reconstructing fire regime from geolocated fire scars dated by dendrochronology. The results show that fire intervals are currently long (40 years), whereas they have fluctuated several times over the past 300 years. Intervals were shorter (10 years) in 1719–1848 and 1923–1970. Burned areas also fluctuated, with larger areas occurring in 1849–1916. Fire seasons have not varied for at least 300 years. We highlighted a non-stochastic regime of fire intervals uncorrelated with burned areas. The fire regime targeted by public policies is not aligned with the historical regimes. We argue for new policies to prevent large fires, which could be more destructive than the frequent and low intensity observed over centuries.
AB - With global changes, disturbances including wildfires are expected to change, with consequences for ecosystems. The chief fire control policy of “fire suppression” aims to limit their numbers and areas. Mediterranean forest ecosystems have coevolved with fires, despite millennia of land use. Biota, climate and humans have long interacted to establish fire regimes in these socio-ecosystems. Sustainable fire stewardship should reconcile the protection of resources and people, while being realistic about the ability to limit all fires and preserving the ecological functions they provided. The past fire regime must be known and compared to the suppression objectives. We hypothesised that fires were infrequent and smaller, but with global changes in recent decades, they would be more frequent, and the burned areas would have increased. We addressed the fire regime (intervals, areas, season) in Corsican black pine forests, western Mediterranean, by reconstructing fire regime from geolocated fire scars dated by dendrochronology. The results show that fire intervals are currently long (40 years), whereas they have fluctuated several times over the past 300 years. Intervals were shorter (10 years) in 1719–1848 and 1923–1970. Burned areas also fluctuated, with larger areas occurring in 1849–1916. Fire seasons have not varied for at least 300 years. We highlighted a non-stochastic regime of fire intervals uncorrelated with burned areas. The fire regime targeted by public policies is not aligned with the historical regimes. We argue for new policies to prevent large fires, which could be more destructive than the frequent and low intensity observed over centuries.
KW - Disturbance
KW - Management
KW - Mediterranean forest
KW - Mountain
KW - Pinus nigra laricio
KW - Tree rings
KW - Wildfire
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105018667386
UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=105018667386&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jenvman.2025.127671
DO - 10.1016/j.jenvman.2025.127671
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105018667386
SN - 0301-4797
VL - 394
JO - Journal of Environmental Management
JF - Journal of Environmental Management
M1 - 127671
ER -