Abstract

AbstractFire is a global driver of ecosystem structure, function, and change. Problems common to fire scientists and managers worldwide include a limited knowledge of how multiple taxonomic groups within a given ecosystem respond to recurrent fires, and how interactions between fire regimes and environmental gradients influence biodiversity. We tested six hypotheses relating to fire regimes and environmental gradients in forest ecosystems using data on birds (493 sites), mammals (175 sites), and vascular plants (615 sites) systematically collected in dry eucalypt forests in southeastern Australia. We addressed each of these hypotheses by fitting species distribution models which differed in the environmental variables used, the spatial extent of the data, or the type of response data. We found (1) as predicted, fire interacted with environmental gradients and shaped species distributions, but there was substantial variation between species; (2) multiple characteristics of fire regimes influenced the distribution of forest species; (3) common to vertebrates and plants was a strong influence of temperature and rainfall gradients, but contrary to predictions, inter‐fire interval was the most influential component of the fire regime on both taxonomic groups; (4) mixed support for the hypothesis that fire would be a stronger influence on species occurrence at a smaller spatial extent; only for vertebrates did scale have an effect in the direction expected; (5) as predicted, vertebrates closely associated with direct measures of habitat structure were those most strongly influenced by fire regimes; and (6) the modeled fire responses for birds were sensitive to the use of either presence–absence or abundance data. These results underscore the important insights that can be gained by modeling how fire regimes, not just fire events, influence biota in forests. Our work highlights the need for management of fire regimes to be complemented by an understanding of the underlying environmental gradients and key elements of habitat structure that influence resource availability for plants and animals. We have demonstrated that there are general patterns in biotic responses to fire regimes and environmental gradients, but landscape management must continue to carefully consider species, scale, and the quality of biodiversity data to achieve biodiversity conservation in fire‐prone forests.

Highlights

  • Fire is a global driver of ecosystem structure, function, and change (Bowman et al 2009, Archibald et al 2013) and is used in forest management worldwide (Keeley et al 2011, Moritz et al 2014)

  • We investigate the potential for field-based measures of habitat structure to predict the distribution of forest birds, and directly compare such habitat models with models built using fire regime variables for the same species

  • We examine the overarching question of how fire and environmental gradients influence species distributions in forest ecosystems, by using data on birds, small mammals, and vascular plants collected for the purpose of understanding fire responses

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Summary

Introduction

Fire is a global driver of ecosystem structure, function, and change (Bowman et al 2009, Archibald et al 2013) and is used in forest management worldwide (Keeley et al 2011, Moritz et al 2014). Recent advances in understanding of fire regimes have contributed much to the knowledge of forest ecosystems (Bradstock et al 2012, Fernandes et al 2013, DellaSala and Hanson 2015), but substantial challenges remain in managing fire for biodiversity conservation. These include limited knowledge of how multiple taxonomic groups within a given ecosystem respond to the spatial and temporal arrangement of fires, how interactions between fire and environmental gradients influence biodiversity, and how the perceived fire responses of species are affected by elements of study design including spatial scale, choice of environmental covariates, and data type. Both theoretical (Austin 2002) and empirical (Tucker et al 2012)

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