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Fire as a selective force in a Bornean tropical everwet forest
Authors:J. W. Ferry Slik   Floris C. Breman   Caroline Bernard   Marloes van Beek   Charles H. Cannon   Karl A. O. Eichhorn  Kade Sidiyasa
Affiliation:(1) Key Laboratory of Tropical Forest Ecology, Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Menglun, 666303, Yunnan, China;(2) Royal Museum for Central Africa, Royal Belgian Institute for Natural Sciences, Tervuren, Belgium;(3) Nationaal Herbarium Nederland, Leiden University, Leiden, The Netherlands;(4) Forest Ecology and Forest Management Group, Centre for Ecosystem Studies, Wageningen University, Wageningen, The Netherlands;(5) Department of Biological Sciences, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, TX, USA;(6) Eichhorn Ecologie, Zeist, The Netherlands;(7) Wanariset-Samboja Herbarium, FORDA, km38, Samboja, East Kalimantan, Indonesia
Abstract:Tree species rarely exposed to burning, like in everwet tropical forests, are unlikely to be fire adapted. Therefore, one could hypothesize that these species are affected equally by burning and that tree abundance changes are linked solely to fire behavior. Alternatively, if species do react differentially to burning, abundance changes should be linked to tree habitat preference and morphology. Using tree inventories from old-growth and adjacent burned Bornean forest in combination with a database on tree morphology and habitat preference, we test these alternative hypotheses by (1) determining whether species specific abundance changes after fire differ significantly from equal change, and (2) whether observed abundance changes are linked to species morphology and habitat preference. We found that of 196 species tested, 125 species showed an abundance change significantly different from that expected under our null model of equal change. These abundance changes were significantly linked to both tree morphology and habitat preference. Abundance declines were associated with slope or ridge preference, thin barks, and limited seed dormancy. Abundance increases were associated with high light preference, small adult stature, light wood, large leaves, small seeds and long seed dormancy. While species habitat preference and morphology explained observed abundance increases well, abundance declines were only weakly associated with them (R 2 ~ 0.09). This suggests that most tree mortality was random and everwet tropical tree species are poorly fire adapted. As fire frequencies are increasing in the everwet tropics, this might eventually result in permanently altered species compositions and even species extinctions.
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