Abstract

Catastrophic wildfire is increasingly common in forests of the western United States because climate change is increasing ambient temperatures and periods of drought. In 2011, the Las Conchas wildfire burned in the Santa Fe National Forest of New Mexico, including portions of ponderosa pine and mixed-conifer forests, and grasslands in the Valles Caldera National Preserve, a large, high-elevation volcanic caldera. Following the fire, Caldera staff began monitoring abiotic, plant, and animal responses. In this study, ground-dwelling arachnids were collected in pitfall traps in burned and unburned habitats from 2011–2015. Permutational multivariate analysis of variance (PERMANOVA) mostly at the genus level with some higher taxon levels showed significant fire, year, and interaction effects. Abundance was at or near unburned levels by 2014, but species composition changed in burned areas. Pardosa and Haplodrassus were dominant genera across habitats. Linyphiids were strong indicators of unburned sites. Harvestmen were among the dominant species in the forest habitats, and erythraeid mites were abundant in the burned ponderosa pine forest and the grassland. Years were not significantly autocorrelated, unsurprising given the interannual variation in precipitation in this generally arid region. Although fire is a common feature of these habitats, future fires may be outside of historical patterns, preventing spider communities from re-establishing fully.

Highlights

  • In 2011, a drought year, the largest wildfire (63,371 ha) in New Mexico, USA up to that time burned in the Santa Fe National Forest, from 26 June to 01 August [1]

  • Spider taxa used in analyses of the monitoring effort were: 64 species in 29 genera and 10 families for ponderosa pine forest (PP); 69 species in 34 genera in 10 families for mixed-conifer forest (MC); and 58 species in 37 genera in 10 families for mountain valley grassland (MV)

  • PERMANOVA effects of wildfire and year were significant in all three habitats, even for the lightly burned MV grassland

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Summary

Introduction

In 2011, a drought year, the largest wildfire (63,371 ha) in New Mexico, USA up to that time burned in the Santa Fe National Forest, from 26 June to 01 August [1]. In the southern Rocky Mountains, several climate change factors are influencing the frequency and severity of fires in this region: trends toward larger fires, warmer maximum air temperatures between September and November, less precipitation between. In the Colorado Front Range of the Rocky Mountains, Rother and Veblen [3] looked at stands of ponderosa pine from past fires to estimate what future climate changes could mean for tree establishment. They found that the severity of the burn was less important than the extent of the fire, making the distance to seed sources for new trees longer.

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