火灾的不协调性可以解释马达加斯加森林和草原普遍退化的原因

G. Joseph, Coleen L Seymour, Andrinajoro R. Rakotoarivelo
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引用次数: 0

摘要

降雨、火灾和生境之间的关系可能不协调。2021 年马达加斯加长满草的生物群落研讨会认为,了解火灾机制是一项知识空白。本研究通过确定马达加斯加一半地区的地貌尺度和全岛火灾异常现象,确定了人为火灾有可能或已经将栖息地转变为无树草地的地区。马达加斯加东部的森林像热带稀树草原一样燃烧,而中西部的草原尽管降雨量通常与森林和无火有关,但燃烧却十分频繁和剧烈。认识到这一不协调现象并更好地了解其驱动因素,可以减轻景观尺度的退化,改善生态功能和人类福祉。数据显示,自 1953 年以来,马达加斯加的人为火灾已将砍伐过的森林变成了无树草原。为了解马达加斯加无树草地在人类居住区的范围,2021 年马达加斯加草地生物群落研讨会将火灾的作用确定为了解生态功能的关键知识缺口。年平均降水量 (MAP)、火灾和栖息地之间的关系在整个中生代系统中已得到公认。经过人为改造的栖息地往往偏离预期的生态模式,因此我们测试了景观尺度、全岛范围内与 MAP 相关的火灾和栖息地异常现象。我们整理了马达加斯加的火灾、栖息地和 MAP 数据集,确定了与全球火灾-栖息地-MAP 预期不一致的位置和规模。接下来,我们利用全球综合景观尺度的火灾机制数据,检验了马达加斯加与全球同等生物群落之间在火灾机制(火灾频率、时间、范围和强度)方面的不匹配。在马达加斯加的一半地区,火灾频率和栖息地与MAP脱钩,马达加斯加各生态区域的火灾机制与世界其他地区共享生物群落的火灾机制存在显著差异。景观尺度上的不一致性横跨马达加斯加东部森林(其燃烧方式类似于热带稀树草原系统)和中西部无树草原,后者燃烧频繁且剧烈,尽管其MAP在全球范围内具有典型的森林存在和火灾缺失的特征。火灾与地图的不一致性确定了可能发生变化的地区,或正在经历火灾变化的地区,并为研究可能导致这些异常现象并使其长期存在的微妙的社会、政治和生态动态建立了一个平台。不协调现象还突显了与火灾异常现象相关的人为景观退化。解决这些影响可促进生态功能、生产力和粮食安全的恢复,在多个尺度上造福于生物多样性和人类。
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Fire incongruities can explain widespread landscape degradation in Madagascar's forests and grasslands
The relationship between rainfall, fire and habitat can display incongruencies. The 2021 Malagasy Grassy Biomes Workshop identified understanding fire regimes as a knowledge gap. This study pinpoints regions where anthropogenic fire has the potential to transform or has transformed habitat to treeless‐grassland, by identifying landscape‐scale, island‐wide fire anomalies across half of Madagascar. Its eastern forests burn like savannas, and central‐western grasslands burn frequently and intensely despite receiving rainfall usually associated with forest and fire‐absence. Recognising the incongruity and better understanding its drivers can mitigate against landscape‐scale degradation, improving ecological function, and human well‐being. Data show that since 1953, human‐lit fires on Madagascar have transformed clear‐cut forest to treeless‐grasslands. To address the extent of Malagasy treeless‐grasslands at human settlement, the 2021 Malagasy Grassy Biomes Workshop identified the role of fire as a critical knowledge‐gap for understanding ecological function. The relationship between mean annual precipitation (MAP), fire and habitat is well established across mesic systems. Anthropogenically transformed habitats often deviate from expected ecological patterns, so we tested for landscape‐scale, island‐wide MAP‐related fire and habitat anomalies. We collated Malagasy fire, habitat and MAP datasets, identifying location and scale of incongruities relative to global fire‐habitat‐MAP expectations. Next, we tested for mismatches in fire regimes (frequency, timing, extent and intensity of fires) between Malagasy and equivalent global biomes, using global, comprehensive landscape‐scale fire regime data. Across half of Madagascar, fire frequency and habitat are decoupled from MAP, and fire regimes across Malagasy ecoregions differ significantly from those in shared biomes elsewhere in the world. Landscape‐scale incongruities span Malagasy eastern forests (which burn like savanna systems) and central‐western treeless‐grasslands, which burn frequently and intensely despite receiving MAP typical of forest presence and fire‐absence, globally. Fire‐MAP incongruities identify potentially transformed areas, or those undergoing transformation by fire, and establish a platform for investigating the nuanced social, political and ecological dynamics that may contribute to and perpetuate these anomalies. Incongruities also highlight the anthropogenic landscape degradation associated with fire anomalies. Addressing these impacts can facilitate restoration of ecological function, productivity and food security, benefiting biodiversity and humans at multiple scales.
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