Groeneveld J, Enright Nj, Lamont Byron B
J Appl Ecol. 2008 Oct;45(5):1477-1485. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2664.2008.01539.x.
Spatio-temporal fire regimes are likely to shift with changes in land use and climate. Such a shift in the disturbance regime has been proposed from recent reconstructions of the regional fire history in the Mediterranean-type woodlands and shrublands of Western Australia which suggest that fire was much more frequent before 1930 (local fire intervals of 3-5 years) than it is today (local fire intervals of 8-15 years).To investigate the potential biodiversity consequences of such changes in fire regime for fire-killed woody species, we developed a spatial model for the serotinous shrub Banksia hookeriana that grows on sand dunes of the Eneabba Plain, Western Australia. We sought to identify the envelope of fire regimes under which the spatially separated populations in this species are able to persist, and whether this encompasses the fire regimes proposed by recent fire-history reconstructions.We tested two fire frequency-size distribution scenarios: (1) a scenario where fire size depends on the spatial patch configuration; and (2) a scenario depending also on available fuel (time since last fire), which reduces fire size at short inter-fire intervals.In scenario 1, metapopulation persistence was only likely for mean ignition intervals at the landscape scale of 6 years. In scenario 2, persistence was likely for the whole range of fire interval distributions at the landscape scale suggested by the empirical data. However, persistence was almost impossible if the mean return fire interval at the local scale (i.e. for individual dunes) is < 8 years.Synthesis and applications. We have demonstrated that this plant metapopulation can potentially persist over a wide range of temporal fire regimes at the landscape scale, so long as there are buffering mechanisms at work (e.g. feedback between fire spread and vegetation age) which reduces the probability of large fires at short intervals. Our findings demonstrate that at least some parts of the landscape must burn substantially less frequently on average than suggested by the empirical fire reconstructions for the early and pre-European period if populations of fire-killed woody species such as B. hookeriana are to be conserved.
随着土地利用和气候的变化,时空火灾模式可能会发生转变。西澳大利亚地中海型林地和灌木丛地区近期对区域火灾历史的重建表明,火灾干扰模式已发生了这种转变,这些重建显示,1930年之前火灾更为频繁(局部火灾间隔为3 - 5年),而如今(局部火灾间隔为8 - 15年)。为了研究火灾模式的这种变化对因火灾致死的木本物种可能产生的生物多样性后果,我们针对生长在西澳大利亚埃纳巴平原沙丘上的具球果的灌木胡克班克西亚松(Banksia hookeriana)开发了一个空间模型。我们试图确定该物种在空间上分离的种群能够持续存在的火灾模式范围,以及这是否涵盖了近期火灾历史重建所提出的火灾模式。我们测试了两种火灾频率 - 规模分布情景:(1)火灾规模取决于空间斑块配置的情景;(2)还取决于可用燃料(上次火灾后的时间)的情景,这会在短火灾间隔期减少火灾规模。在情景1中,仅当景观尺度上的平均点火间隔为6年时,集合种群才有可能持续存在。在情景2中,对于经验数据所表明的景观尺度上整个火灾间隔分布范围,集合种群持续存在是可能的。然而,如果局部尺度(即对于单个沙丘)的平均回火间隔小于8年,持续存在几乎是不可能的。综合与应用。我们已经证明,只要有缓冲机制在起作用(例如火灾蔓延与植被年龄之间的反馈),从而降低短间隔期发生大火的可能性,那么这个植物集合种群在景观尺度上的广泛时间火灾模式下都有可能持续存在。我们的研究结果表明,如果要保护像胡克班克西亚松这样因火灾致死的木本物种的种群,那么景观的至少某些部分平均燃烧频率必须大大低于早期和欧洲人到来之前时期经验性火灾重建所表明的频率。