“…Since the 1970s, researchers have considered this area of research to be particularly significant [7,12], and since 1990, numerous studies have been published assessing the contribution of pyrogenic greenhouse gas emissions to total anthropogenic emissions [6,7,[13][14][15]. Estimates now exist for carbon emissions from fires in tropical [15,16] and boreal forests [6,10,14,[17][18][19][20][21], African [22][23][24] and Australian [25] savannas, and steppe regions [26,27]. Numerous works are likewise devoted to assessing the scale and impact of wildfires in the boreal zone of the Northern Hemisphere [10,[19][20][21]28]; however, most authors focus primarily on forestry [10,14,19,20,[29][30][31] and peat fires [32,33], as well as the consequences of agricultural burns in North America [34], Eastern Europe [34][35][36][37], and Asia [38].…”