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Native herbivore exerts contrasting effects on fire regime and vegetation structure
Authors:Hierro José L  Clark Kenneth L  Branch Lyn C  Villarreal Diego
Institution:(1) Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cient?ficas y T?cnicas (CONICET), 6300 Santa Rosa, La Pampa, Argentina;(2) Universidad Nacional de La Pampa (UNLPam), 6300 Santa Rosa, La Pampa, Argentina;(3) Silas Little Experimental Forest, USDA Forest Service, 501 Four Mile Road, New Lisbon, NJ 08064, USA;(4) Department of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation, University of Florida, PO Box 110430, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA;(5) Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, UNLPam, Santa Rosa, Argentina
Abstract:Although native herbivores can alter fire regimes by consuming herbaceous vegetation that serves as fine fuel and, less commonly, accumulating fuel as nest material and other structures, simultaneous considerations of contrasting effects of herbivores on fire have scarcely been addressed. We proposed that a colonial rodent, vizcacha (Lagostomus maximus), reduces and increases fire intensity at different stages in its population cycle in the semiarid scrub of Argentina. Specifically, we hypothesized that, when colonies are active, vizcachas create natural fire-breaks through intense grazing, generating over time patches of large unburned shrubs in grazed zones. In contrast, when colonies are abandoned, recovery of fine fuels and previous accumulation of coarse wood on colonies during territorial displays increases fire intensity, creating patches of high shrub mortality. To test these hypotheses, we estimated stem age of the dominant shrub (Larrea divaricata) and measured aboveground biomass in zones actively grazed by vizcachas and in ungrazed zones, and compared densities of live and dead shrubs on abandoned colonies and adjacent zones following fire. In active colonies, age and biomass of shrubs were much greater in grazed than ungrazed zones. In abandoned colonies that had been burnt, density of dead, burned shrubs was higher and density of live shrubs was lower than in adjacent zones. These results support our hypotheses and reveal a new interaction between native herbivores and fire, in which herbivores augment fire intensity by gathering fuel. Our findings indicate that, through opposing effects on fire, native herbivores enhance the heterogeneity of vegetation in woody-dominated ecosystems.
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