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多分类生物多样性对 2019-2020 年澳大利亚特大火灾的响应。

Multi-taxon biodiversity responses to the 2019-2020 Australian megafires.

机构信息

Centre for Ecosystem Science, School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences, UNSW Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.

Department of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation, Fort Lauderdale Research and Education Center, University of Florida, Davie, Florida, USA.

出版信息

Glob Chang Biol. 2023 Dec;29(23):6727-6740. doi: 10.1111/gcb.16955. Epub 2023 Oct 12.

Abstract

Conditions conducive to fires are becoming increasingly common and widespread under climate change. Recent fire events across the globe have occurred over unprecedented scales, affecting a diverse array of species and habitats. Understanding biodiversity responses to such fires is critical for conservation. Quantifying post-fire recovery is problematic across taxa, from insects to plants to vertebrates, especially at large geographic scales. Novel datasets can address this challenge. We use presence-only citizen science data from iNaturalist, collected before and after the 2019-2020 megafires in burnt and unburnt regions of eastern Australia, to quantify the effect of post-fire diversity responses, up to 18 months post-fire. The geographic, temporal, and taxonomic sampling of this dataset was large, but sampling effort and species discoverability were unevenly spread. We used rarefaction and prediction (iNEXT) with which we controlled sampling completeness among treatments, to estimate diversity indices (Hill numbers: q = 0-2) among nine broad taxon groupings and seven habitats, including 3885 species. We estimated an increase in species diversity up to 18 months after the 2019-2020 Australian megafires in regions which were burnt, compared to before the fires in burnt and unburnt regions. Diversity estimates in dry sclerophyll forest matched and likely drove this overall increase post-fire, while no taxon groupings showed clear increases inconsistent with both control treatments post-fire. Compared to unburnt regions, overall diversity across all taxon groupings and habitats greatly decreased in areas exposed to extreme fire severity. Post-fire life histories are complex and species detectability is an important consideration in all post-fire sampling. We demonstrate how fire characteristics, distinct taxa, and habitat influence biodiversity, as seen in local-scale datasets. Further integration of large-scale datasets with small-scale studies will lead to a more robust understanding of fire recovery.

摘要

在气候变化的影响下,有利于火灾发生的条件变得越来越普遍和广泛。最近,世界各地的火灾事件发生的规模前所未有,影响了多种多样的物种和栖息地。了解生物多样性对这些火灾的反应对于保护至关重要。从昆虫到植物再到脊椎动物,跨分类群量化火灾后的恢复情况是有问题的,尤其是在大地理尺度上。新的数据集可以解决这一挑战。我们使用 iNaturalist 收集的存在-仅公民科学数据,该数据是在澳大利亚东部燃烧和未燃烧地区的 2019-2020 年大火前后收集的,以量化火灾后多样性反应的影响,最多可达火灾后 18 个月。该数据集的地理、时间和分类采样规模很大,但采样工作和物种发现的分布不均匀。我们使用稀有度和预测(iNEXT)来控制处理之间的采样完整性,以估计九个广泛的分类群分组和七个栖息地中的多样性指数(Hill 数:q=0-2),包括 3885 个物种。我们估计,与燃烧和未燃烧地区的火灾前相比,在 2019-2020 年澳大利亚大火发生后的 18 个月内,燃烧地区的物种多样性增加。在干旱硬叶林森林中,多样性估计值与火灾后总体增加相匹配,并且可能驱动了这种增加,而火灾后没有任何分类群分组显示出与两种对照处理不一致的明显增加。与未燃烧地区相比,在暴露于极端火灾严重程度的地区,所有分类群分组和栖息地的整体多样性大大降低。火灾后生命史是复杂的,物种发现率是所有火灾后采样的一个重要考虑因素。我们展示了火灾特征、不同的分类群和栖息地如何影响生物多样性,这在局部尺度数据集中可见。进一步将大规模数据集与小规模研究相结合,将导致对火灾恢复的更稳健理解。

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