Fire frequency and severity mediate recruitment response of a threatened shrub following severe megafire

IF 3.6 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ECOLOGY Fire Ecology Pub Date : 2023-11-02 DOI:10.1186/s42408-023-00217-z
Tom Le Breton, Laura Schweickle, Craig Dunne, Mitchell Lyons, Mark Ooi
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Abstract

Abstract Background Climate change is driving global fire regimes toward greater extremes, potentially threatening plant species that are adapted to historic fire regimes. Successful conservation of threatened plant species depends upon improving our understanding of how they respond to these changing fire regimes in fire prone regions. The 2019–2020 Australian megafires burnt at very high to extreme severity across an unprecedented extent and overlaid a complex history of prescribed burns and wildfires, providing an ideal foundation to study the consequences of multiple fire regime elements. We examined the recruitment response of Pomaderris bodalla , one of many threatened obligate-seeding shrub species growing in wet sclerophyll (mesic) forest in south-east Australia. We surveyed seedling recruitment at sites across a gradient of fire severity and frequency. Our aims were to (i) confirm in vitro results that suggest a positive relationship with fire severity; (ii) determine the species response to fire frequency and (iii) identify the nature of the effect of fire severity and fire frequency in combination. Results We found that recruitment had a positive response to fire severity, peaking at high severity sites as soil temperatures reached optimal levels for dormancy-break but declining, while still remaining positive, at moderate and extreme severity sites. The pattern of response matched in vitro studies, which had established that physically dormant P. bodalla seeds had minimal dormancy broken at low fire-related temperatures, peak dormancy broken at high fire-related temperatures and heat-induced mortality at extreme temperatures. Fire frequency had an overall negative effect on recruitment, with fewer recruits at more frequently burnt sites and this effect appeared to be additive with fire severity. Conclusion Our findings indicate that increased fire frequency poses an ongoing threat to P. bodalla and similar obligate-seeding shrub species. The hump-shaped relationship with fire severity suggests that future large-scale extreme fires will cause seed mortality-induced reduction in recruitment, with the potential to exacerbate the negative effects of high fire frequency. Informed management of threatened species requires detailed knowledge of species responses to multiple fire regime elements, and novel fire response traits like seed dormancy can provide beneficial insights for robust conservation strategies.
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火灾频率和严重程度调节了严重特大火灾后受威胁灌木的补充反应
气候变化正在推动全球火灾制度走向更极端,潜在地威胁到适应历史火灾制度的植物物种。成功保护受威胁的植物物种取决于提高我们对它们如何应对火灾易发地区这些变化的火灾制度的理解。2019-2020年澳大利亚特大火灾以前所未有的程度以极高至极端严重程度燃烧,覆盖了规定烧伤和野火的复杂历史,为研究多种火灾制度要素的后果提供了理想的基础。本文研究了Pomaderris bodalla,一种生长在澳大利亚东南部湿硬叶林(mesic)的受威胁专播灌木物种。我们调查了不同火灾严重程度和发生频率的地点的幼苗招募情况。我们的目的是:(i)证实体外实验结果表明与火灾严重程度呈正相关;(ii)确定物种对火灾频率的反应,以及(iii)确定火灾严重程度和火灾频率相结合的影响性质。结果我们发现,当土壤温度达到最佳休眠水平时,高严重地点的招募率达到峰值,但在中度和极端严重地点,招募率下降,但仍保持积极状态。这种反应模式与体外研究相吻合,体外研究表明,物理休眠的波达拉种子在低火相关温度下休眠中断最少,在高火相关温度下休眠高峰中断,在极端温度下热致死亡。火灾频率总体上对招聘有负面影响,在更频繁燃烧的地点招聘的人员更少,这种影响似乎与火灾严重程度有关。结论火灾发生频率的增加对红杉和类似的专播灌木物种构成持续威胁。与火灾严重程度的驼峰关系表明,未来的大规模极端火灾将导致种子死亡导致的招募减少,并有可能加剧高火灾频率的负面影响。濒危物种的知情管理需要详细了解物种对多种火灾因素的反应,而种子休眠等新的火灾反应特征可以为稳健的保护策略提供有益的见解。
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来源期刊
Fire Ecology
Fire Ecology ECOLOGY-FORESTRY
CiteScore
6.20
自引率
7.80%
发文量
24
审稿时长
20 weeks
期刊介绍: Fire Ecology is the international scientific journal supported by the Association for Fire Ecology. Fire Ecology publishes peer-reviewed articles on all ecological and management aspects relating to wildland fire. We welcome submissions on topics that include a broad range of research on the ecological relationships of fire to its environment, including, but not limited to: Ecology (physical and biological fire effects, fire regimes, etc.) Social science (geography, sociology, anthropology, etc.) Fuel Fire science and modeling Planning and risk management Law and policy Fire management Inter- or cross-disciplinary fire-related topics Technology transfer products.
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