AUTHOR=Baltzer Jennifer L. , Haché Samuel , Hodson James , Ahmed M. Razu , Carrière Suzanne , Coyle Matthew , McIntire Eliot J. B. , McLaren Ashley , Riordan-Short Eamon , Turetsky Merritt R. , van der Sluijs Jurjen , Wilson Joanna , Woodworth Bradley K. TITLE=Impacts of novel wildfire disturbance on landcover and wildlife in boreal North America JOURNAL=Frontiers in Environmental Science VOLUME=Volume 13 - 2025 YEAR=2025 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/environmental-science/articles/10.3389/fenvs.2025.1504568 DOI=10.3389/fenvs.2025.1504568 ISSN=2296-665X ABSTRACT=The summer of 2023 was the first time the planet exceeded 1.5 °C above pre-industrial average temperatures and was recognized as the hottest year on record globally. In Canada, this translated to temperatures that were 2.2 °C above average, resulting in a record shattering fire season. Burning conditions were exceptional in many ways including large total burned area and individual fire size, vast swaths of short-interval reburns and severe combustion, fast-moving wildfires, and substantial burning outside of the typical fire season, reflecting climate warming-induced changes in fire regime. While we know how some components of biodiversity in the boreal biome have responded to historic burning, the 2023 fire season highlights that we are rapidly moving into a novel set of burning conditions and that we require better knowledge of how these conditions will alter landcover and the associated wildlife communities. Here, we synthesize our understanding of how changing fire regimes will affect (short- and long-term effects) boreal landscapes and the implications of these changes for terrestrial wildlife using the extreme burning conditions in subarctic forests of the Northwest Territories, Canada in 2023 as a case study. Our goals were to a) evaluate the impacts of the changing fire regime on habitat composition and/or structure in the short- and longer-term; and b) assess the potential responses of terrestrial vertebrates to these changes based on our understanding of their reliance on key aspects of habitat composition and/or structure. We describe impacts of changes in individual aspects of the fire regime on wildlife taxa but, overall, at the landscape level, changes in fire regime are altering the composition and structure of boreal forests, which will drive decreases in taxa requiring mature conifer forest and post-fire structural complexity while favoring early seral species or those that prefer broadleaf forests or open habitats. This review offers us a range of possibilities about the future landcover and northern wildlife communities under changing wildfires, however uncertainties about feedbacks and future conditions of this vast, diverse, and remote landscape present the greatest challenges for forecasting and other supports for adaptation planning.