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Global response of fire activity to late Quaternary grazer extinctions

Allison T. Karp, J. Tyler Faith, Jennifer R. Marlon, A. Carla Staver

2021Science68 citationsDOI

Abstract

Fire activity varies substantially at global scales because of the influence of climate, but at broad spatiotemporal scales, the possible effects of herbivory on fire activity are unknown. Here, we used late Quaternary large-bodied herbivore extinctions as a global exclusion experiment to examine the responses of grassy ecosystem paleofire activity (through charcoal proxies) to continental differences in extinction severity. Grassy ecosystem fire activity increased in response to herbivore extinction, with larger increases on continents that suffered the largest losses of grazers; browser declines had no such effect. These shifts suggest that herbivory can have Earth system–scale effects on fire and that herbivore impacts should be explicitly considered when predicting changes in past and future global fire activity.

Topics & Concepts

HerbivoreExtinction (optical mineralogy)EcosystemEcologyClimate changeFire regimeGlobal changeCharcoalQuaternaryExtinction eventEnvironmental scienceTerrestrial ecosystemBiologyPaleontologyPopulationMetallurgyMaterials scienceBiological dispersalSociologyDemographyGeology and Paleoclimatology ResearchFire effects on ecosystemsEcology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies
Global response of fire activity to late Quaternary grazer extinctions | Litcius