Wildfire risk for species under climate change
Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift, 2026

Wildfires are emerging as a major driver of biodiversity loss, yet their long-term implications for species under climate change remain poorly quantified. Here we show that future wildfire exposure will substantially increase for 9,592 non-marine species identified as threatened by increased fire frequency and/or intensity. Under shared socioeconomic pathway 2-4.5, global burned area is projected to increase by 9.3%, with 83.9% of wildfire-vulnerable species exposed to higher risk and ~40% of South American species experiencing >50% increases. High-latitude regions exhibit the fastest intensification, with fire season duration more than doubling. Species with small ranges and elevated conservation concern—particularly in South America, Australia and South Asia—dominate the top 1% most affected taxa. In contrast, up to 41.8% of African species experience reduced exposure, revealing marked spatial asymmetry in future risk. Our results demonstrate that climate-driven shifts in wildfire exposure are highly uneven across regions and taxa, underscoring the need for targeted, region-specific conservation strategies.

Författare

Xiaoye Yang

Göteborgs universitet

Mark C. Urban

University of Connecticut

Bo Su

Stockholm Resilience Centre

Göteborgs universitet

Ziqian Zhong

Chalmers, Rymd-, geo- och miljövetenskap, Geovetenskap och fjärranalys

Chao Wu

Tsinghua University

Deliang Chen

Göteborgs universitet

Tsinghua University

Nature Climate Change

1758-678X (ISSN) 1758-6798 (eISSN)

Vol. In Press

Ämneskategorier (SSIF 2025)

Miljövetenskap

Ekologi

Klimatvetenskap

DOI

10.1038/s41558-026-02600-5

Mer information

Senast uppdaterat

2026-04-13