Moretti Marco, Duelli Peter, Obrist Martin K
WSL Swiss Federal Research Institute, Sottostazione Sud delle Alpi, 6501, Bellinzona, Switzerland.
Oecologia. 2006 Aug;149(2):312-27. doi: 10.1007/s00442-006-0450-z. Epub 2006 Jun 28.
Changes in ecosystem functions following disturbances are of central concern in ecology and a challenge for ecologists is to understand the factors that affect the resilience of community structures and ecosystem functions. In many forest ecosystems, one such important natural disturbance is fire. The aim of this study was to understand the variation of resilience in six functional groups of invertebrates in response to different fire frequencies in southern Switzerland. We measured resilience by analysing arthropod species composition, abundance and diversity in plots where the elapsed time after single or repeated fires, as determined by dendrochronology, varied. We compared data from these plots with data from plots that had not burned recently and defined high resilience as the rapid recovery of the species composition to that prior to fire. Pooling all functional groups showed that they were more resilient to single fires than to repeated events, recovering 6-14 years after a single fire, but only 17-24 years after the last of several fires. Flying zoophagous and phytophagous arthropods were the most resilient groups. Pollinophagous and epigaeic zoophagous species showed intermediate resilience, while ground-litter saprophagous and saproxylophagous arthropods clearly displayed the lowest resilience to fire. Their species composition 17-24 years post-burn still differed markedly from that of the unburned control plots. Depending on the fire history of a forest plot, we found significant differences in the dominance hierarchy among invertebrate species. Any attempt to imitate natural disturbances, such as fire, through forest management must take into account the recovery times of biodiversity, including functional group composition, to ensure the conservation of multiple taxa and ecosystem functions in a sustainable manner.
干扰后生态系统功能的变化是生态学的核心关注点,而生态学家面临的一项挑战是了解影响群落结构和生态系统功能恢复力的因素。在许多森林生态系统中,火灾就是这样一种重要的自然干扰。本研究的目的是了解瑞士南部六种无脊椎动物功能群对不同火灾频率的恢复力变化。我们通过分析节肢动物的物种组成、丰度和多样性来衡量恢复力,这些数据来自于通过树木年代学确定单次或多次火灾后经过不同时间的样地。我们将这些样地的数据与近期未发生火灾的样地数据进行比较,并将高恢复力定义为物种组成迅速恢复到火灾前的状态。综合所有功能群的数据表明,它们对单次火灾的恢复力比对多次火灾的恢复力更强,单次火灾后6 - 14年恢复,而在多次火灾中的最后一次火灾后则需要17 - 24年才能恢复。飞行食虫和植食性节肢动物是恢复力最强的群体。食花粉和地表食虫物种的恢复力中等,而地表枯枝落叶腐食性和蛀木腐食性节肢动物对火灾的恢复力明显最低。火灾后17 - 24年它们的物种组成仍与未燃烧的对照样地有显著差异。根据森林样地的火灾历史,我们发现无脊椎动物物种的优势等级存在显著差异。任何通过森林管理来模拟自然干扰(如火灾)的尝试都必须考虑生物多样性的恢复时间,包括功能群组成,以确保以可持续的方式保护多个分类群和生态系统功能。