Conserving long unburnt vegetation is important for bird species, guilds and diversity

被引:0
|
作者
Robert A. Davis
Tim S. Doherty
Eddie J.B. van Etten
James Q. Radford
Floyd Holmes
Chris Knuckey
Belinda J. Davis
机构
[1] Edith Cowan University,School of Science
[2] University of Western Australia,School of Animal Biology
[3] Bush Heritage Australia,School of Plant Biology
[4] MWH Australia,Kings Park and Botanic Garden
[5] University of Western Australia,Centre for Integrative Ecology, School of Life and Environmental Sciences
[6] The Botanic Gardens and Parks Authority,undefined
[7] Deakin University,undefined
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关键词
Chronosequence; Disturbance ecology; Fire; Mediterranean; Prescribed burning;
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学科分类号
摘要
Landscape-level wildfires have a major role in structuring faunal assemblages, particularly in fire-prone landscapes. These effects are mediated by changes to vegetation structure and composition that directly influence the availability of shelter, feeding and breeding resources. We investigated the response of a semi-arid shrubland bird community in Western Australia to the prevailing fire regime by examining the abundance, diversity and guild structure in relation to time since fire. We also examined vegetation structural attributes in relation to time since fire. We surveyed 32 sites ranging in age from 12 to 84 years since last fire. A total of 845 birds from 40 species were recorded. Vegetation structure varied with fire history with old and very old sites characterised by less bare ground, more leaf litter cover and greater canopy cover. Bird community composition varied with time since fire, driven by increased bird species richness and abundance of insectivores, granivores/frugivores, golden whistlers, grey shrike-thrush and red-capped robins with time since fire. Frequent, intense landscape-scale fires transform the landscape into homogeneous young shrublands, which may render vegetation unsuitable for several species and guilds.
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页码:2709 / 2722
页数:13
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