Principal Investigators: David Bowman and Jennifer Balch

Landscape fires affect biodiversity, human health, the global radiation budget,
carbon balance and hydrological cycles Photo Credit: USGS
It is time to rethink the place of fire on Earth. Megafires are currently overwhelming human control, despite huge budgets and mature fire-fighting technologies. There is mounting evidence that, beyond immediate destruction of life and property, landscape fires have long-term effects on global carbon stocks, biodiversity, climate, world economies, and human health. Despite fire’s pervasive influence in many disciplines, there is no uniting theory or paradigm concerning the role of biomass burning in Earth science. Moreover, fire has not been satisfactorily considered by global change policy and ecosystem management. We, therefore, propose a thought experiment addressing:
- Whether fire would evolve where carbon-based life is present
- How it would evolve, and
- How humans, their cultures, and fire may have coevolved
We will combine knowledge about biomass burning across fields to develop an integrative paradigm of 'pyrogeography' that addresses these fundamental questions. In a period of intensifying fire activity, our synthesis will provide crucial information that aids human adaptation.


