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Fire Effects on Wildlife 18 September 2006
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Fire Effects on Wildlife

Feb 22, 2016

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Fire Effects on Wildlife. 18 September 2006. Direct Effects. Few studies, marked re-capture approach ideal Body size and mobility, i.e. burrowing, influence direct mortality Life cycle stages are impacted differently Depends on fire regime Frequency, intensity, extent, and season - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Fire Effects on Wildlife

Fire Effects on Wildlife

18 September 2006

Page 2: Fire Effects on Wildlife

Direct Effects• Few studies, marked re-capture approach ideal

– Body size and mobility, i.e. burrowing, influence direct mortality

• Life cycle stages are impacted differently• Depends on fire regime

– Frequency, intensity, extent, and season– Extent-small area, greater ability to repopulate

• Must look at populations rather than the individual

Page 3: Fire Effects on Wildlife

Indirect Effects

• Fire severity and resulting successional patterns dictate wildlife habitats and the effect on wildlife

• Importance of fire regime

• (+/-) Consumer response is species dependent, must consider mechanisms at work

Page 4: Fire Effects on Wildlife

TTYP: What are the indirect effects of fire on wildlife habitat?

Page 5: Fire Effects on Wildlife

Mechanisms of post-fire population change

• Availability of food resources and changes in cover regulate population response

• Sorting out these mechanisms is a research challenge

Page 6: Fire Effects on Wildlife

Understanding the Consumer Response to Food Resources

• Fire alters production, species availability, and food quality

• Migration and immigration • Short term effects

– Arizona grassland example• Green vegetation declines while seed availability

increase• Differential small mammal response

Page 7: Fire Effects on Wildlife

Understanding the Consumer Response to Food Resources

• Alternatively, shift in food sources– Ex. Australian eucalypt forest

• Bettongs exploit fire adapted fungus

– Ex. Primates in Borneo shifting food sources• Flowers and fruits unavailable→ foliar/herbaceous vegetation

and caterpillars/larvae of wood boring insects

Page 8: Fire Effects on Wildlife

Plant Succession and Animal Response

• Ex. Browsers in N.A. boreal forest– Caribou eat lichen, slow growth, easily burned

• Caribou in late successional – Moose eat woody resprouts (birch, aspen)

• Moose in early successional

Page 9: Fire Effects on Wildlife

Consumer Response and Food Quality

• Pulse of higher quality new growth– Increase in protein (nitrogen content) in new

growth– New tender shoots with greater digestibility– Increase in population growth rates?

• Ex. Domestic grazers

Page 10: Fire Effects on Wildlife

Changes in Cover• Burned vegetation results in drastic change in both

physical and thermal cover– Ex. Cryptic insects, evolutionary response

• Physical protection from predation– Structure provides protective habitat

• Structure effects visibility

Page 11: Fire Effects on Wildlife

• Clearing of structure provides visibility – Ex. Red-cockaded

woodpecker and loblolly pine understory maintenance

Page 12: Fire Effects on Wildlife

Balancing Protective Cover and Food Availability

• Tallgrass prairie example• Bird response

• Increase in seed/insect availability• Decrease in cover, nesting habitat, and predator

protection

• Small mammal response • Some small rodents, i.e. prairie vole, are small

navigate litter layer and find seed• Other larger rodents, prefer burned area with

easier seed access

Page 13: Fire Effects on Wildlife

Structural Diversity• Interspersion of food resources and

cover

• Positive or negative effects depending on the severity and extent and the wildlife considered

• Reduced habitat heterogeneity by large extent, severe fires

Page 14: Fire Effects on Wildlife

Example: Structural Diversity• Habitat diversity

and complexity, each supports a specific faunal community– Ex. Snags

important for birds, mammals, reptiles, amphibians, and invertebrates

Page 15: Fire Effects on Wildlife

Structural Diversity and Patchiness• Refugia for migration

and nucleus for recovery

• Mature cover and adjacent high quality growth

• Mosaics of food resources and cover create structural diversity– Ecotones - boundaries

Page 16: Fire Effects on Wildlife

Landscape Diversity Example: Mississippi Alluvial Valley

• Landscape complexity through burning– Rice and waterfowl management– Mississippi rice fields, interspersion of open

water and emergent vegetation (Kross 2006)