Abstract

Grassland ecosystems are evolutionarily linked to disturbances such as grazing and fire. These disturbances define grassland plant communities and habitat heterogeneity, which influence animal communities. We evaluated the influence of fire disturbance on plant and bird communities and on habitat structure by sampling grassland fragments with different time elapsed since the last fire event. Habitat structure was sampled using plant life forms and abiotic variables and birds were sampled through point counts. We recorded 862 bird individuals from 70 species. Intermediately-burnt sites harbor higher habitat heterogeneity and plant species richness in comparison with recently or long-burnt sites. Bird abundance and taxonomic diversity decreased linearly as time since fire increased. Finally, time since fire influenced the relative distribution of plant life forms and bird food guilds. Our results indicate that fire management should be included in the framework for conservation and sustainable use of grasslands, because it promotes habitat heterogeneity and diversity. To maintain habitat heterogeneity and the related habitat-specific bird species and functional groups, conservation efforts should maintain grassland patches under different management intensities and frequencies on a landscape level. However, studies focused on determining the periodicity with which fire management should be used are still lacking.

Highlights

  • Grassland ecosystems cover approximately 40% of the world’s ­surface[1], harboring a unique ­biodiversity[2,3,4]

  • Linear and quadratic models were equivalent regarding the response of bird community descriptors to time since fire and plant/habitat descriptors, with the exception of bird taxonomic diversity explained by habitat structure (Table 1, Fig. 4)

  • Our results indicated that habitat variables related to the grassland vegetation respond to time since fire, and that these habitat variables shape bird community patterns

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Summary

Introduction

Grassland ecosystems cover approximately 40% of the world’s ­surface[1], harboring a unique ­biodiversity[2,3,4]. Bird diversity patterns and community composition are strongly influenced by such environmental ­drivers[6]. Among these drivers, vegetation structure and the directly related habitat complexity are key determinants of grassland bird community ­structure[8,9,10]. The effect of fire in grassland-associated fauna tends to be species-specific, the majority of the responses of grassland animal diversity to fire is linked to habitat heterogeneity (that is, the structure of grassland plant communities), resource availability, and interspecific interactions (e.g.,9,28–32). When fire regimes comprise either very frequent or very rare fire events, the availability of grass seeds for granivores may be affected via the reduction of plant and seed d­ ensity[68]

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