Analysing How Pre-Fire Habitat Legacy and Post-Fire Management Influence the Resilience of Reptiles to Fire

At the landscape scale, the Mediterranean region is a mosaic of habitats occupied by plants and animals with different resilience to fire. One of these habitats, the pine plantation, is characterized by its structural simplification and susceptibility to fire. Despite its high flammability, few stud...

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Autores principales: Alberto Muñoz, Ángel M. Felicísimo, Xavier Santos
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Publicado: MDPI AG 2021
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:8b3733402f8e4af083ffd39f179467242021-11-25T17:37:49ZAnalysing How Pre-Fire Habitat Legacy and Post-Fire Management Influence the Resilience of Reptiles to Fire10.3390/f121114871999-4907https://doaj.org/article/8b3733402f8e4af083ffd39f179467242021-10-01T00:00:00Zhttps://www.mdpi.com/1999-4907/12/11/1487https://doaj.org/toc/1999-4907At the landscape scale, the Mediterranean region is a mosaic of habitats occupied by plants and animals with different resilience to fire. One of these habitats, the pine plantation, is characterized by its structural simplification and susceptibility to fire. Despite its high flammability, few studies have compared the response of animal communities between pine plantations and other autochthonous woodlands. For five years after a large fire in southwestern Europe, we surveyed reptiles in two natural habitats (oak forest, scrubland) and a pine plantation managed with salvage logging, a post-fire practice which consists of the complete harvesting and removal of death burnt trees. Reptile abundance and species composition were examined to assess differences in the reptile community between these habitats. Differences between burnt and unburnt transects were limited to the first year after the fire, while, over the entire five-year period, differences in species composition and abundance were due to vegetation type instead of fire. The pine logged area showed a delay in the recovery of vegetation and also in the appearance of many reptile species after the fire. At the reptile species level, we found evidence of both positive responses to fire (for lizards with high heliothermic activity) and negative ones (for specialist snake species). Overall, our results confirm the resilience of the reptile community to fire. The mosaic of habitats in the Mediterranean region and the openness caused by fire can increase the reptile biodiversity (landscape- plus pyro-diversity effects), but some practices such as salvage logging coupled with fire regime shifts (larger and more frequent fires) can compromise the conservation of the biodiversity in fire-prone regions.Alberto MuñozÁngel M. FelicísimoXavier SantosMDPI AGarticlewildfireslizardssalvage loggingMediterranean basinNDVI indexvegetation regenerationPlant ecologyQK900-989ENForests, Vol 12, Iss 1487, p 1487 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic wildfires
lizards
salvage logging
Mediterranean basin
NDVI index
vegetation regeneration
Plant ecology
QK900-989
spellingShingle wildfires
lizards
salvage logging
Mediterranean basin
NDVI index
vegetation regeneration
Plant ecology
QK900-989
Alberto Muñoz
Ángel M. Felicísimo
Xavier Santos
Analysing How Pre-Fire Habitat Legacy and Post-Fire Management Influence the Resilience of Reptiles to Fire
description At the landscape scale, the Mediterranean region is a mosaic of habitats occupied by plants and animals with different resilience to fire. One of these habitats, the pine plantation, is characterized by its structural simplification and susceptibility to fire. Despite its high flammability, few studies have compared the response of animal communities between pine plantations and other autochthonous woodlands. For five years after a large fire in southwestern Europe, we surveyed reptiles in two natural habitats (oak forest, scrubland) and a pine plantation managed with salvage logging, a post-fire practice which consists of the complete harvesting and removal of death burnt trees. Reptile abundance and species composition were examined to assess differences in the reptile community between these habitats. Differences between burnt and unburnt transects were limited to the first year after the fire, while, over the entire five-year period, differences in species composition and abundance were due to vegetation type instead of fire. The pine logged area showed a delay in the recovery of vegetation and also in the appearance of many reptile species after the fire. At the reptile species level, we found evidence of both positive responses to fire (for lizards with high heliothermic activity) and negative ones (for specialist snake species). Overall, our results confirm the resilience of the reptile community to fire. The mosaic of habitats in the Mediterranean region and the openness caused by fire can increase the reptile biodiversity (landscape- plus pyro-diversity effects), but some practices such as salvage logging coupled with fire regime shifts (larger and more frequent fires) can compromise the conservation of the biodiversity in fire-prone regions.
format article
author Alberto Muñoz
Ángel M. Felicísimo
Xavier Santos
author_facet Alberto Muñoz
Ángel M. Felicísimo
Xavier Santos
author_sort Alberto Muñoz
title Analysing How Pre-Fire Habitat Legacy and Post-Fire Management Influence the Resilience of Reptiles to Fire
title_short Analysing How Pre-Fire Habitat Legacy and Post-Fire Management Influence the Resilience of Reptiles to Fire
title_full Analysing How Pre-Fire Habitat Legacy and Post-Fire Management Influence the Resilience of Reptiles to Fire
title_fullStr Analysing How Pre-Fire Habitat Legacy and Post-Fire Management Influence the Resilience of Reptiles to Fire
title_full_unstemmed Analysing How Pre-Fire Habitat Legacy and Post-Fire Management Influence the Resilience of Reptiles to Fire
title_sort analysing how pre-fire habitat legacy and post-fire management influence the resilience of reptiles to fire
publisher MDPI AG
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/8b3733402f8e4af083ffd39f17946724
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