Marlon Taylor , Ben C. Scheele , Renee Brawata , Matthew Gale , Philip Gibbons
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Effects of fire severity and fire frequency on the abundance of hollows and hollow-bearing trees
Tree hollows are an essential nesting and denning resource for a diverse range of vertebrate fauna and declines in tree-hollows can lead to declines in hollow-using vertebrates. The forests of south-eastern Australia are experiencing more frequent fires and it has been predicted that a greater area of forest will experience high severity effects from fire under climate change. However, the consequences of changing fire regimes for tree hollows is unclear. We identified the relative effects of the severity of a recent wildfire (the Black Summer fires of 2020) and the frequency of historical fires over 100 years on the number of hollows and hollow-bearing trees in a montane forest ecosystem. We found that the mean number of hollow-bearing trees and total hollows was not significantly different across plots unburnt and burnt in the 2020 fire. Plots that experienced high fire severity had fewer hollow-bearing trees than unburnt plots, but plots that experienced low fire severity had slightly more hollow-bearing trees than unburnt plots. The number of hollows declined with the number of fires that had occurred over the past 100 years. Our results suggest that fire is both an agent of hollow destruction and creation and thus one or more fires may not result in a net loss of hollow-bearing trees at the landscape scale. However, our results imply that a shift towards more high severity burning may result in fewer hollows and hollow-bearing trees across the landscape.
期刊介绍:
Forest Ecology and Management publishes scientific articles linking forest ecology with forest management, focusing on the application of biological, ecological and social knowledge to the management and conservation of plantations and natural forests. The scope of the journal includes all forest ecosystems of the world.
A peer-review process ensures the quality and international interest of the manuscripts accepted for publication. The journal encourages communication between scientists in disparate fields who share a common interest in ecology and forest management, bridging the gap between research workers and forest managers.
We encourage submission of papers that will have the strongest interest and value to the Journal''s international readership. Some key features of papers with strong interest include:
1. Clear connections between the ecology and management of forests;
2. Novel ideas or approaches to important challenges in forest ecology and management;
3. Studies that address a population of interest beyond the scale of single research sites, Three key points in the design of forest experiments, Forest Ecology and Management 255 (2008) 2022-2023);
4. Review Articles on timely, important topics. Authors are welcome to contact one of the editors to discuss the suitability of a potential review manuscript.
The Journal encourages proposals for special issues examining important areas of forest ecology and management. Potential guest editors should contact any of the Editors to begin discussions about topics, potential papers, and other details.