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Human-Imposed, Fine-Grained Patch Burning Explains the Population Stability of a Fire-Sensitive Conifer in a Frequently Burnt Northern Australia Savanna

机译:人为施加的,细粒度的斑块燃烧说明了在北澳大利亚稀树草原上火烧的针叶树的种群稳定性

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Woody plant demographics provide important insight into ecosystem state-shifts in response to changing fire regimes. In Australian tropical savannas, the switch from patchy landscape burning by Aborigines to unmanaged wildfires within the past century has been implicated in biodiversity declines including the fire-sensitive conifer, Callitris intratropica. C. intratropica commonly forms small, closed-canopy groves that exclude fire and allow recruitment of conspecifics and other fire-sensitive woody plants. C. intratropica groves provide a useful indicator of heterogeneity and fire regime change, but the mechanisms driving the species' persistence and decline remain poorly understood. We examined the hypothesis that C. intratropica population stability depends upon a regime of frequent, low-intensity fires maintained by Aboriginal management. We combined integral projection models of C. intratropica population behaviour with an environmental state change matrix to examine how vital rates, grove dynamics and the frequency of high- and low-intensity fires contribute to population stability. Closed-canopy C. intratropica groves contributed disproportionately to population growth by promoting recruitment, whereas singleton trees accounted for a larger proportion of adult mortality. Our patch-based population model predicted population declines under current fire frequencies and that the recruitment of new groves plays a critical role in the species' persistence. Our results also indicated that reducing fire intensity, a key outcome of Aboriginal burning, leads to C. intratropica population persistence even at high fire frequencies. These findings provide insight into the relationship between ecosystem composition and human-fire interactions and the role of fire management in sustaining the mosaics that comprise 'natural' systems.
机译:木本植物的人口统计数据为应对不断变化的火情提供了生态系统状态转变的重要见解。在澳大利亚的热带稀树草原上,在过去的一个世纪中,从原住民燃烧的斑驳景观转变为未经管理的野火,这与生物多样性的下降有关,包括对火敏感的针叶树Callitris intratropica。 C. intratropica通常形成小型的,封闭的树丛,这些树丛排除了火种,并允许招募物种和其他对火敏感的木本植物。 C.tropicala树林提供了异质性和火情变化的有用指标,但驱动该物种持久性和衰退的机制仍然知之甚少。我们检查了以下假设:热带梭菌种群稳定性取决于原住民管理维持的频繁,低强度火灾。我们将热带热带梭菌种群行为的整体投影模型与环境状态变化矩阵相结合,以检验生命率,林间动态以及高强度和低强度火灾的发生率如何有助于人口稳定。密闭冠内热带小树林通过促进募集为人口增长做出了不成比例的贡献,而单身树木占成年人死亡率的更大比例。我们基于补丁的种群模型预测,在当前的火灾频率下种群将减少,并且新林的招募对物种的持久性起着至关重要的作用。我们的结果还表明,降低火强度是原住民燃烧的主要结果,即使在高火频率下,也导致热带果蝇种群持续存在。这些发现提供了对生态系统组成与人与火之间的关系以及消防管理在维持组成“自然”系统的镶嵌图方面的作用的深刻见解。

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