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Smoke and Air Quality
Year of Publication
2025
Publication Type
Wildfire-specific fine particulate matter and preterm birth: a US ECHO Cohort analysis
Year of Publication
2025
Publication Type
Background
Exposure to PM2·5 from wildfire smoke during pregnancy has been implicated as a risk factor for preterm birth. We investigated this association in the prospective nationwide US Environmental Influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) Cohort, focusing on prenatal wildfire PM2·5 exposure intensity, duration, and timing.
Long-range PM2.5 pollution and health impacts from the 2023 Canadian wildfires
Year of Publication
2025
Publication Type
The western North American forestland carbon sink: will our climate commitments go up in smoke?
Year of Publication
2025
Publication Type
Pathways to achieving net-zero and net-negative greenhouse-gas (GHG) emission targets rely on land-based contributions to carbon (C) sequestration. However, projections of future contributions neglect to consider ecosystems, climate change, legacy impacts of continental-scale fire exclusion, forest accretion and densification, and a century or more of management.
Motivating parents to protect their children from wildfire smoke: the impact of air quality index infographics
Year of Publication
2025
Publication Type
Background. Wildfire smoke events are increasing in frequency and intensity due to climate change. Children are especially vulnerable to health effects even at moderate smoke levels. However, it is unclear how parents respond to Air Quality Indices (AQIs) frequently used by agencies to communicate air pollution health risks. Methods.
Air Quality Impacts of the January 2025 Los Angeles Wildfires: Insights from Public Data Sources
Year of Publication
2025
Publication Type
Smoke from the Los Angeles (LA) wildfires that started on January 7, 2025 caused severe air quality impacts across the region. Government agencies released guidance on assessing personal risk, pointing to publicly available data platforms that present information from monitoring networks and smoke plume outlines.
Effect of Recent Prescribed Burning and Land Management on Wildfire Burn Severity and Smoke Emissions in the Western United States
Year of Publication
2025
Publication Type
Wildfires in the western US increasingly threaten infrastructure, air quality, and public health. Prescribed (“Rx”) fire is often proposed to mitigate future wildfires, but treatments remain limited, and few studies quantify their effectiveness on recent major wildfires.
Climate Change Contributions to US Wildfire Smoke PM2.5 Mortality Between 2006-2020
Year of Publication
2025
Publication Type
RATIONALE Wildfires have increased in frequency and intensity due to climate change and now contribute to nearly half of the annual average of fine particulate matter in the US. While the effects of short-term wildfire-PM2.5 exposure on respiratory diseases are well-described, the impact of climate change on longer duration wildfire-PM2.5 mortality is unknown.
Anthropogenic climate change contributes to wildfire particulate matter and related mortality in the United States
Year of Publication
2025
Publication Type
Climate change has increased forest fire extent in temperate and boreal North America.
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