About this Research Topic
There is a need to develop or improve our conceptual models and understanding of where and when fires occur in desert ecosystems, as well as to clarify the key environmental and human factors shaping past and contemporary fire regimes, including traditional burning practices that have shaped the biota in many regions. Further, we need to improve our ability to predict the effects of future environmental change on desert fire regimes and associated wildfire threat and behavior. Understanding variation in fire regimes across arid landscapes is important, especially where different vegetation types occur in response to soil and/or topographic patterning, as these present particular challenges for land managers. Lastly, the impact of modified fire regimes on desert life (flora, fauna & microbes) needs further exploration, both within systems with biota adapted to regular fire and those which lack such means to survive and/or regenerate after fire.
For this Research Topic, we welcome contributions which:
1) use innovative techniques or astute integration of evidence to provide new insights into fire regimes of deserts and their drivers;
2) document or predict changes in fire regime in response to global environmental change, regional policy changes or local factors;
3) quantify impacts of fire, regimes or change in regimes on desert biota; and
4) compare and contrast fire adaptations of desert ecosystems across the globe or with that of other ecosystems/biomes.
Although we are interested in covering the ecology of fire in arid and semi-arid lands broadly, we particularly seek studies focused on hot deserts (i.e. areas with aridity index <0.2, i.e. where annual pan evaporation is at least 5 times greater than annual rainfall, on average).
Keywords: Desert, Arid, Fire, Ecology, Functional Traits
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.