Post-fire recovery of ant communities in Submediterranean Pinus nigra forests

被引:37
|
作者
Rodrigo, A [1 ]
Retana, J [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Autonoma Barcelona, Fac Ciencies, Ecol CREAF, E-08193 Barcelona, Spain
关键词
D O I
10.1111/j.2006.0906-7590.04272.x
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
This study analyzes the variations in the structure and composition of ant communities in burned Pinus nigra forests in central Catalonia (NE Spain). Pinus nigra forests do not recover after fire, changing to shrublands and oak coppices. For this reason, we suggest that ant communities of burned P. nigra forests will change after fire, because the post-fire scenario, in particular with the increase of open areas, is different to the unburned one, and more favourable for some species than for others. In four locations previously occupied by P. nigra forests where different fires occurred 1, 5, 13 and 19 yr before the sampling, we sampled the structure and composition of ant communities with pitfall traps, tree traps and net sweeping in unburned plots and in plots affected by canopy and understory fire. The results obtained suggest that canopy and understory fire had little effect on the structure of ant communities. Thus, many variables concerning ant communities were not modified either by fire type (understory or canopy fire) or by time since fire. However, a number of particular species were affected, either positively or negatively, by canopy fire: three species characteristic of forest habitats decreased after fire, while eight species characteristic of open habitats increased in areas affected by canopy fire, especially in the first few years after fire. These differences in ant community composition between burned and unburned plots imply that the maximum richness is achieved when there is a mixture of unburned forests and areas burned with canopy fire. Moreover, as canopy cover in P. nigra forests burned with canopy fire is not completed in the period of time studied, the presence of the species that are characteristic of burned areas remains along the chronosequence studied, while the species that disappear after fire do not recover in the period of time considered. Overall, the results obtained indicate that there is a persistent replacement of ant species in burned P. nigra forests, as is also the case with vegetation.
引用
收藏
页码:231 / 239
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Post-Fire Recovery of Eucalypt-Dominated Vegetation Communities in the Sydney Basin, Australia
    Jessica T. Heath
    Chris J. Chafer
    Thomas F. A. Bishop
    Floris F. Van Ogtrop
    Fire Ecology, 2016, 12 : 53 - 79
  • [32] Post-fire recovery of desert bryophyte communities: effects of fires and propagule soil banks
    Smith, Robert J.
    Abella, Scott R.
    Stark, Lloyd R.
    JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE, 2014, 25 (02) : 447 - 456
  • [33] Post-fire successions in protected mountain forests of Crimea
    Levchenko, K.
    Matveev, S.
    Konstantinov, A.
    INTERNATIONAL FORESTRY FORUM FOREST ECOSYSTEMS AS GLOBAL RESOURCE OF THE BIOSPHERE: CALLS, THREATS, SOLUTIONS, 2020, 595
  • [34] Modelling post-fire vegetation recovery in Portugal
    Bastos, A.
    Gouveia, C. M.
    DaCamara, C. C.
    Trigo, R. M.
    BIOGEOSCIENCES, 2011, 8 (12) : 3593 - 3607
  • [35] Effects of fire and post-fire salvage logging on avian communities in conifer-dominated forests of the western United States
    Kotliar, NB
    Hejl, SJ
    Hutto, RL
    Saab, VA
    Melcher, CP
    McFadzen, ME
    EFFECTS OF HABITAT FRAGMENTATION ON BIRDS IN WESTERN LANDSCAPES: CONTRASTS WITH PARADIGMS FROM THE EASTERN UNITED STATES, 2002, (25): : 49 - 64
  • [36] Effects of tree size, crown damage, and tree location on post-fire survival and cone production of Pinus nigra trees
    Ordóñez, JL
    Retana, J
    Espelta, JM
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2005, 206 (1-3) : 109 - 117
  • [37] Post-fire vegetation succession:: The case of Aleppo pine (Pinus halepensis Miller) forests of Northern Achaia (Greece).
    Verroios, G
    Georgiadis, T
    FRESENIUS ENVIRONMENTAL BULLETIN, 2002, 11 (04): : 186 - 193
  • [38] Direct Seeding of Pinus halepensis Mill. for Recovery of Burned Semi-Arid Forests: Implications for Post-Fire Management for Improving Natural Regeneration
    Antonio Garcia-Morote, Francisco
    Martinez-Garcia, Eduardo
    Andres-Abellan, Manuela
    Rubio Caballero, Eva
    Miettinen, Heli
    Ramon Lopez-Serrano, Francisco
    FORESTS, 2017, 8 (09):
  • [39] PARALLELS IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF POST-FIRE FUNGAL AND HERB COMMUNITIES
    WICKLOW, DT
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF EDINBURGH SECTION B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 1988, 94 : 87 - 95
  • [40] The response of boreal forest songbird communities to fire and post-fire harvesting
    Morissette, JL
    Cobb, TP
    Brigham, RM
    James, PC
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH, 2002, 32 (12) : 2169 - 2183