Résumé
Disturbance regimes such as fire are key drivers of biodiversity, structuring habitats and shaping species assemblages. Fire regimes are rapidly changing due to climate warming, land-use shifts, and long-term suppression policies. Altered fire frequency, size, and severity are reshaping landscape mosaics and affecting biodiversity, including bird community composition and functional diversity. This talk examines how changes in disturbance dynamics influence ecological resilience and explores the potential for the rewilding of disturbance regimes to better align biodiversity conservation with the realities of global change.