Invasive species, extreme fire risk, and toxin release under a changing climate
Kimberley Miner (1), Laura Meyerson (2) . Climate Change Institute and, School of Earth, Climate Sciences, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469 2., Department of Natural Resources Science, University of Rhode Island,, Kingston, RI 02881

TL;DR
This paper examines how invasive species, climate change, and fire suppression have increased wildfire risks and toxin release in Mediterranean-type ecosystems, emphasizing the need for adaptive management to protect ecosystems and human health.
Contribution
It identifies key drivers weakening fire-adapted ecosystems and proposes strategies for managing impacts under changing climate conditions.
Findings
Increased wildfire severity linked to invasive species and climate change.
Toxin release from destroyed structures poses health risks.
Ecosystem management strategies can mitigate fire and toxin impacts.
Abstract
Mediterranean ecosystems such as those found in California, Central Chile, Southern Europe, and Southwest Australia host numerous, diverse, fire-adapted micro-ecosystems. These micro-ecosystems are as diverse as mountainous conifer to desert-like chaparral communities. Over the last few centuries, human intervention, invasive species, and climate warming have drastically affected the composition and health of Mediterranean ecosystems on almost every continent. Increased fuel load from fire suppression policies and the continued range expansion of non-native insects and plants, some driven by long-term drought, produced the deadliest wildfire season on record in 2018. As a consequence of these fires, a large number of structures are destroyed, releasing household chemicals into the environment as uncontrolled toxins. The mobilization of these materials can lead to health risks and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFire effects on ecosystems · Isotope Analysis in Ecology · Species Distribution and Climate Change
