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Starting points for small mammal population recovery after wildfire: recolonisation or residual populations?

Identifieur interne : 003E40 ( PascalFrancis/Curation ); précédent : 003E39; suivant : 003E41

Starting points for small mammal population recovery after wildfire: recolonisation or residual populations?

Auteurs : Sam C. Banks [Australie] ; Matthieu Dujardin [France] ; Lachlan Mcburney [Australie] ; David Blair [Australie] ; Maree Barker [Australie] ; David B. Lindenmayer [Australie]

Source :

RBID : Pascal:11-0052104

Descripteurs français

English descriptors

Abstract

Wildfire is a major driver of spatio-temporal variation in terrestrial ecosystems. Large wildfires are predicted to occur more frequently due to climate change. The mechanisms by which post-fire recovery proceeds are influenced by the abundance of survivors, and their distribution in relation to habitat variability and refugia. Thus, characterising early post-fire demographic processes is critical to understanding the demographic and community-level responses of ecosystems to fire. The Black Saturday fires of February 2009 burnt an area of approximately 3500 km2 in Victoria, Australia. We quantified the effects of this high severity forest fire on the habitat, abundance, sex ratio and body mass of two small mammal species, the agile antechinus Antechinus agilis and bush rat Rattus fuscipes. We developed a hypothetical framework to distinguish in situ survival and rapid recolonisation as the processes underlying short-term post-fire distributions. These hypotheses were based on expected patterns of abundance over increasing distances from unburnt sources, and the estimated recolonisation capabilities of each species and sex. The agile antechinus and bush rat were present in burnt sites at 30% and 12% of the density observed in unburnt sites. In situ survival, and not recolonisation, was the most plausible explanation for our findings. Abundance and body mass data indicated a greater effect of fire on the bush rat than the agile antechinus. The bush rat showed a shift in topographic association, whereby drainage lines acted as post-fire refugia. Our findings suggest these species do not depend on recolonisation for recovery, and that the bush rat will follow a nucleated recovery, expanding from topographic refugia. Thus, connectivity-reducing management activities, such as salvage logging and firebreak and road construction, may not affect the early stages of population recovery in remaining stands of burnt forest. Rather, ongoing recovery is likely to be limited by demographic rates and resource availability.
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A08 01  1  ENG  @1 Starting points for small mammal population recovery after wildfire: recolonisation or residual populations?
A11 01  1    @1 BANKS (Sam C.)
A11 02  1    @1 DUJARDIN (Matthieu)
A11 03  1    @1 MCBURNEY (Lachlan)
A11 04  1    @1 BLAIR (David)
A11 05  1    @1 BARKER (Maree)
A11 06  1    @1 LINDENMAYER (David B.)
A14 01      @1 The Fenner School of Environment and Society, The Australian National Univ. @2 Canberra, ACT 0200 @3 AUS @Z 1 aut. @Z 3 aut. @Z 4 aut. @Z 5 aut. @Z 6 aut.
A14 02      @1 Institut Supérieur d'Agriculture, 48 Boulevard Vauban @2 59046 Lille @3 FRA @Z 2 aut.
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C01 01    ENG  @0 Wildfire is a major driver of spatio-temporal variation in terrestrial ecosystems. Large wildfires are predicted to occur more frequently due to climate change. The mechanisms by which post-fire recovery proceeds are influenced by the abundance of survivors, and their distribution in relation to habitat variability and refugia. Thus, characterising early post-fire demographic processes is critical to understanding the demographic and community-level responses of ecosystems to fire. The Black Saturday fires of February 2009 burnt an area of approximately 3500 km2 in Victoria, Australia. We quantified the effects of this high severity forest fire on the habitat, abundance, sex ratio and body mass of two small mammal species, the agile antechinus Antechinus agilis and bush rat Rattus fuscipes. We developed a hypothetical framework to distinguish in situ survival and rapid recolonisation as the processes underlying short-term post-fire distributions. These hypotheses were based on expected patterns of abundance over increasing distances from unburnt sources, and the estimated recolonisation capabilities of each species and sex. The agile antechinus and bush rat were present in burnt sites at 30% and 12% of the density observed in unburnt sites. In situ survival, and not recolonisation, was the most plausible explanation for our findings. Abundance and body mass data indicated a greater effect of fire on the bush rat than the agile antechinus. The bush rat showed a shift in topographic association, whereby drainage lines acted as post-fire refugia. Our findings suggest these species do not depend on recolonisation for recovery, and that the bush rat will follow a nucleated recovery, expanding from topographic refugia. Thus, connectivity-reducing management activities, such as salvage logging and firebreak and road construction, may not affect the early stages of population recovery in remaining stands of burnt forest. Rather, ongoing recovery is likely to be limited by demographic rates and resource availability.
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C03 01  X  FRE  @0 Micromammifère @5 01
C03 01  X  ENG  @0 Micromammals @5 01
C03 01  X  SPA  @0 Micromamífero @5 01
C03 02  X  FRE  @0 Restauration population @5 02
C03 02  X  ENG  @0 Population recovery @5 02
C03 02  X  SPA  @0 Restauración población @5 02
C03 03  X  FRE  @0 Feu végétation @5 03
C03 03  X  ENG  @0 Vegetation fire @5 03
C03 03  X  SPA  @0 Fuego vegetación @5 03
C03 04  X  FRE  @0 Recolonisation @5 04
C03 04  X  ENG  @0 Recolonization @5 04
C03 04  X  SPA  @0 Recolonización @5 04
N21       @1 031
N44 01      @1 OTO
N82       @1 OTO

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Pascal:11-0052104

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   |type=    RBID
   |clé=     Pascal:11-0052104
   |texte=   Starting points for small mammal population recovery after wildfire: recolonisation or residual populations?
}}

Wicri

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Data generation: Tue Dec 5 10:43:12 2017. Site generation: Tue Mar 5 14:07:20 2024