Buckingham Sebastian, Murphy Nick, Gibb Heloise
Department of Zoology, La Trobe University, Melbourne, VIC, 3086, Australia.
Department of Genetics, La Trobe University, Melbourne, VIC, 3086, Australia.
PLoS One. 2015 Apr 16;10(4):e0124556. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0124556. eCollection 2015.
High severity wildfire events are a feature of forests globally and are likely to be more prevalent with climate change. As a disturbance process, fire has the potential to change important ecological functions, such as decomposition, through its impact on biodiversity. Despite the recognised importance of decomposition in terms of fuel loads and energy flow, little is known about the post-fire effects of fire severity on decomposition by litter-dwelling macroinvertebrate detritivores. We tested the hypotheses that: 1) increasing fire severity is associated with decreased rates of leaf litter decomposition by macroinvertebrate detritivores; and 2) the abundance and biomass of macroinvertebrate detritivores decreases with increasing fire severity, while body size increases. We used a litterbag experiment at long-unburnt, ground-burnt and crown-burnt sites (n = 7 for all treatments) to test the effect of fire severity on: a) macroinvertebrate-driven break-down of litter fuel loads; and b) the size and abundance of macroinvertebrate detritivores three years after fire. Microhabitat conditions differed among fire severity classes. Macroinvertebrate exclusion reduced litter decomposition by 34.7%. Macroinvertebrate detritivores were larger and less abundant following higher severity fires, possibly as a result of fire-induced changes in habitat structure. Opposing effects of fire severity on macroinvertebrate abundance and body size resulted in both similar detritivore biomass and, most interestingly, no differences in leaf litter decomposition under different fire severities. This suggests that the diversity of macroinvertebrates enhances functional resilience of litter decomposition to fire and that litter-breakdown is not inhibited within three years following a high severity fire in this forest type and where recolonisation sources are readily available. We found no support for the hypothesis that high severity fires reduce litter decomposition and therefore increase the likelihood of future fires.
高强度野火事件是全球森林的一个特征,并且随着气候变化可能会更加普遍。作为一种干扰过程,火灾有可能通过其对生物多样性的影响来改变重要的生态功能,如分解作用。尽管分解作用在燃料负荷和能量流动方面的重要性已得到认可,但关于火灾严重程度对落叶层大型无脊椎动物分解者分解作用的火灾后影响却知之甚少。我们检验了以下假设:1)火灾严重程度增加与大型无脊椎动物分解者对落叶层的分解速率降低有关;2)大型无脊椎动物分解者的丰度和生物量随着火灾严重程度的增加而减少,而个体大小增加。我们在长期未燃烧、地面燃烧和树冠燃烧的地点(所有处理均为n = 7)进行了落叶袋实验,以测试火灾严重程度对以下方面的影响:a)大型无脊椎动物驱动的落叶燃料负荷分解;b)火灾三年后大型无脊椎动物分解者的大小和丰度。不同火灾严重程度等级的微生境条件有所不同。大型无脊椎动物的排除使落叶分解减少了34.7%。在火灾严重程度较高之后,大型无脊椎动物分解者个体更大且数量更少,这可能是火灾引起的栖息地结构变化的结果。火灾严重程度对大型无脊椎动物丰度和个体大小的相反影响导致分解者生物量相似,最有趣的是,在不同火灾严重程度下落叶分解没有差异。这表明大型无脊椎动物的多样性增强了落叶分解对火灾的功能恢复力,并且在这种森林类型中,在高强度火灾发生后三年内,落叶分解不会受到抑制,且重新定殖来源很容易获得。我们没有找到支持高强度火灾会减少落叶分解从而增加未来火灾可能性这一假设的证据。