“…We distinguish this fire adaptation strategy from other fire‐adapted life histories, such as “fire‐embracing” strategies (Keeley, 2012), which involve loss of aboveground biomass and post‐fire regeneration via resprouting or serotiny and may be adaptive under less frequent, higher‐intensity fire regimes (Pausas, Keeley, & Schwilk, 2017; Schwilk & Ackerly, 2001), and fire‐avoiding strategies, which involve ecosystems that burn infrequently and do not select for fire‐adaptive traits. We chose to focus on fire resistance rather than fire‐embracing traits in our analysis because the degree of fire resistance of different species is hypothesized to be strongly associated with the frequency and spatial extent of surface fire in forests of the western USA (Safford & Stevens, 2017; Steel, Safford, & Viers, 2015), and there is strong morphological variation among widespread species. Furthermore, the question of post‐fire recovery, which is influenced by fire‐embracing traits, dispersal traits and seedling niche requirements, is distinct from the question of which species are best adapted to survive frequent fires, which is the dimension of fire regimes we are considering here.…”