Promoting Optimal Habitat Availability by Maintaining Fine-Grained Burn Mosaics: A Modelling Study in an Australian Semi-Arid Temperate Woodland

Fire Pub Date : 2024-05-21 DOI:10.3390/fire7060172
Ben J. French, Brett P. Murphy, David M. J. S. Bowman
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Abstract

The pyrodiversity–biodiversity (P–B) hypothesis posits that spatiotemporally variable fire regimes increase wildlife habitat diversity, and that the fine-grained mosaics resulting from small patchy fires enhance biodiversity. This logic underpins the patch mosaic burning (PMB) paradigm and reinforces the benefits of Indigenous fire management, which tends to promote pyrodiversity. However, tests of the P–B hypothesis and PMB paradigm are few. One of the most comprehensive field evaluations—a snapshot study of pre-existing fire mosaics in south-east Australian semi-arid mallee eucalypt woodlands—found little support. To explore the longer-term effects of fire mosaic grain size on habitat availability and biodiversity, we combined published data from the mallee study with a simple fire simulation. We simulated 500 years of landscape burning under different fire sizes. In the resulting mosaics, we assessed the proportional mixture and patch configuration of successional habitat states, then summarised habitat availability through time using a composite index based on the published fire history responses of 22 vertebrate taxa from the mallee study. Small fires formed fine-grained mosaics with a stable habitat mixture and with habitat diversity occurring at fine scales. Large fires formed coarse-grained mosaics with the opposite properties. The fine-grained mosaics maintained optimal habitat availability for vertebrate diversity over 500 years, while the fluctuating habitat mixture in the coarse-grained mosaics was unlikely to maintain maximum vertebrate diversity. Broadly, our results support the P–B hypothesis and justify further field-testing and evaluation of PMB programs to manage both pyrodiversity and biodiversity in the mallee and other flammable landscapes.
通过保持细粒度燃烧镶嵌促进最佳生境可用性:澳大利亚半干旱温带林地模型研究
火多样性-生物多样性(P-B)假说认为,时空多变的火灾机制会增加野生动物栖息地的多样性,而小片状火灾产生的细粒度镶嵌会增强生物多样性。这一逻辑是斑块镶嵌式燃烧(PMB)范例的基础,并强化了土著火管理的益处,因为土著火管理往往会促进火多样性。然而,对 P-B 假设和 PMB 范式的检验却很少。其中一项最全面的实地评估--对澳大利亚东南部半干旱马利桉树林地原有的火烧镶嵌图案进行的快照研究--几乎没有得到支持。为了探索火镶嵌纹理大小对栖息地可用性和生物多样性的长期影响,我们将马利研究公布的数据与简单的火灾模拟相结合。我们模拟了不同火力大小的 500 年景观燃烧。在由此产生的马赛克中,我们评估了演替栖息地状态的混合比例和斑块配置,然后根据马利研究中 22 个脊椎动物分类群已发表的火灾历史反应,使用综合指数对栖息地可用性进行了时间总结。小火形成了细粒度镶嵌,具有稳定的栖息地混合物,并且在细粒度上出现了栖息地多样性。大火形成的粗粒马赛克具有相反的特性。细粒度马赛克在 500 年内保持了脊椎动物多样性的最佳栖息地可用性,而粗粒度马赛克中波动的栖息地混合物不太可能保持最大的脊椎动物多样性。总的来说,我们的研究结果支持P-B假说,并证明有理由对PMB计划进行进一步的实地测试和评估,以管理mallee和其他易燃地貌的火多样性和生物多样性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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