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首页> 外文期刊>The Journal of Applied Ecology >Fish on Fire: Shifts in Amazonian fish communities after floodplain forest fires
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Fish on Fire: Shifts in Amazonian fish communities after floodplain forest fires

机译:着火的鱼:洪泛区森林火灾后亚马逊鱼类群落的变化

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Abstract Severe droughts can lead to fires that cause massive tree mortality in even the wettest and most isolated Amazonian forests. After repeated fires, blackwater floodplain forests can remain in an open vegetation state of arrested succession that facilitates a transition towards a white‐sand ‘savanna‐like’ vegetation. These vegetation shifts, from closed‐canopy floodplain forests to open fire scars and eventually white‐sand savannas, may have profound implications for fish communities that depend on floodplain forests for food and recruitment. In turn, changes in fish communities may contribute to the arrested forest recovery after fires as fish are important seed dispersal agents for many floodplain tree species. To explore the impacts of floodplain forest fires on fish communities, we sampled fish in unburnt forests, fire scars, and white‐sand savannas in the middle Rio Negro basin (Brazil) during two consecutive flooding seasons. We compared the abundance, species richness, and the taxonomic and trophic composition of fish assemblages across the three habitat types. We found significant shifts in fish assemblages in fire scars compared to unburnt floodplain forests. Also, as fire scars increased in size, total fish biomass decreased strongly. Fish communities in unburnt floodplain forests seem to be characterized by a higher proportion of smaller and omnivorous fish species than fish communities in burned floodplain forests and white sand savannas. Fish assemblages in fire scars and white‐sand savanna were not significantly different. Synthesis and Applications. Amazonian fish communities change after floodplain forest fires. Unburnt forests have diverse fish communities, with a large proportion of unique and small omnivorous species. In contrast, carnivores and detritivores become more common in fire scars and white‐sand savannas formed after forest fires. Less omnivore fish after forest fires can reduce tree seed dispersal and forest regeneration, affecting ecosystem functioning and the services provided by Amazonian forests. Fish are also a primary source of food and income for people living in Amazonian floodplains. Preventing forest fires is therefore of fundamental importance for the conservation of Amazonian aquatic and terrestrial ecological communities as well as for the livelihood of people.
机译:摘要 严重的干旱会导致火灾,即使在最潮湿和最孤立的亚马逊森林中也会导致大量树木死亡。在反复发生火灾后,黑水泛滥平原森林可以保持开放的植被状态,从而促进向白沙“稀树草原式”植被的过渡。这些植被的变化,从封闭的树冠洪泛平原森林到开放的火灾疤痕,最终是白沙稀树草原,可能对依赖洪泛区森林作为食物和招募的鱼类群落产生深远的影响。反过来,鱼类群落的变化可能有助于火灾后森林的停滞恢复,因为鱼类是许多洪泛区树种的重要种子传播剂。为了探索洪泛区森林火灾对鱼类群落的影响,我们在连续两个洪水季节对里约内格罗盆地中部(巴西)未燃烧的森林、火灾疤痕和白沙稀树草原中的鱼类进行了采样。我们比较了三种生境类型鱼类组合的丰度、物种丰富度以及分类和营养组成。我们发现,与未烧毁的洪泛平原森林相比,火灾疤痕中的鱼类组合发生了显着变化。此外,随着火灾疤痕面积的增加,鱼类总生物量大幅下降。未烧毁的洪泛平原森林中的鱼类群落的特点似乎是比被烧毁的洪泛平原森林和白色沙滩稀树草原中的鱼类群落的比例更高。火痕和白沙稀树草原中的鱼类群落没有显著差异。合成与应用.洪泛区森林火灾后,亚马逊鱼类群落发生了变化。未烧毁的森林拥有多样化的鱼类群落,其中有很大比例的独特和小型杂食性物种。相比之下,食肉动物和碎屑动物在森林火灾后形成的火灾疤痕和白沙稀树草原中更为常见。森林火灾后杂食性鱼类减少会减少树木种子的传播和森林再生,从而影响生态系统功能和亚马逊森林提供的服务。鱼类也是生活在亚马逊洪泛区的人们的主要食物和收入来源。因此,预防森林火灾对于保护亚马逊水生和陆地生态群落以及人们的生计至关重要。

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