Caldararo N
San Francisco State University, Department of Anthropology, CA 94132-4155, USA.
Sci Total Environ. 2002 Jun 26;292(3):141-65. doi: 10.1016/s0048-9697(01)01067-1.
The present text is a summary of research on the relationship between forest fires and human activities. Numerous theories have been created to explain changes in forests during the late Pleistocene and early Holocene, and a general understanding has developed in the past 50 years regarding natural fire regimes. The present summary is directed to assess the validity of these theories. A re-analysis of the literature argues that the intense forest fires we experience today are an artifact of human intervention in forest ecology, especially by the reduction of herbivores and are relatively recent, approximately 100,000-250,000 BP. The history of fire, especially in the context of the increased dominance of humans, has produced a progressively fire-adapted ecology, which argues for human-free wildlife areas and against prescribed burns under many circumstances.
本文是关于森林火灾与人类活动关系的研究总结。人们已经提出了许多理论来解释晚更新世和全新世早期森林的变化,并且在过去50年里对自然火灾规律有了一个普遍的认识。本总结旨在评估这些理论的有效性。对文献的重新分析认为,我们今天经历的强烈森林火灾是人类干预森林生态的产物,特别是通过减少食草动物,而且相对较新,大约在距今10万至25万年前。火灾的历史,特别是在人类主导地位增强的背景下,产生了一种逐渐适应火灾的生态,这支持建立无人类干扰的野生动物保护区,并反对在许多情况下进行计划性焚烧。