I am pleased to present the new article by Justin Badeau (doctoral student) on wildfire regimes in Corsica over the past 350 years (1659-2024). Published in the Journal of Environmental Management <https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2025.127671>, this article highlights variations in the average intervals between fires, burned areas, and the fire season in black pine forest. The study focuses on four montane forests located from north to south of Corsica, comprising 22 plots and 270 sampled trees. Dendrochronology (ring-ring analysis) allows for the reconstruction of fire dates and seasons, as well as burned areas, using a spatial model applied to the geolocated sampled trees. The article shows that the wildfire frequency and burned areas have varied several times over the past 350 years, but not the fire season. Currently, the regime is characterized by longer intervals between wildfires than in the past, which contradicts the idea that climate change would lead to more frequent fires. Finally, the study shows that public fire suppression policies are creating an unprecedented situation, because, as far back as history goes, Corsican forests have regularly experienced wildfires. These results call into question the coherence of public fire suppression policies when wildfires provide ecosystem services.