首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
   检索      


Severe wildfires promoted by climate change negatively impact forest amphibian metacommunities
Authors:Chad T Beranek  Andrew J Hamer  Stephen V Mahony  Andrew Stauber  Shelby A Ryan  John Gould  Samantha Wallace  Sarah Stock  Oliver Kelly  Thomas Parkin  Rudolf Weigner  Garry Daly  Alex Callen  Jodi J L Rowley  Kaya Klop-Toker  Michael Mahony
Institution:1. Conservation Science Research Group, School of Environmental and Life Sciences, Biology Building, University of Newcastle, Callaghan, New South Wales, Australia;2. Conservation Science Research Group, School of Environmental and Life Sciences, Biology Building, University of Newcastle, Callaghan, New South Wales, Australia

Institute of Aquatic Ecology, Centre for Ecological Research, Budapest, Hungary

National Multidisciplinary Laboratory for Climate Change, Centre for Ecological Research, Budapest, Hungary;3. Australian Museum Research Institute, The Australian Museum, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia;4. Gaia Research, North Nowra, New South Wales, Australia

Abstract:

Aim

Changes to the extent and severity of wildfires driven by anthropogenic climate change are predicted to have compounding negative consequences for ecological communities. While there is evidence that severe weather events like drought impact amphibian communities, the effects of wildfire on such communities are not well understood. The impact of wildfire on amphibian communities and species is likely to vary, owing to the diversity of their life-history traits. However, no previous research has identified commonalities among the amphibians at most risk from wildfire, limiting conservation initiatives in the aftermath of severe wildfire. We aimed to investigate the impacts of the unprecedented 2019–2020 black summer bushfires on Australian forest amphibian communities.

Location

Eastern coast of New South Wales, Australia.

Methods

We conducted visual encounter surveys and passive acoustic monitoring across 411 sites within two regions, one in northeast and one in southeast New South Wales. We used fire severity and extent mapping in two multispecies occupancy models to assess the impacts of fire on 35 forest amphibian species.

Results

We demonstrate a negative influence of severe fire extent on metacommunity occupancy and species richness in the south with weaker effects in the north—reflective of the less severe fires that occurred in this region. Both threatened and common species were impacted by severe wildfire extent. Occupancy of burrowing species and rain forest specialists had mostly negative relationships with severe wildfire extent, while arboreal amphibians had neutral relationships.

Main Conclusion

Metacommunity monitoring and adaptive conservation strategies are needed to account for common species after severe climatic events. Ecological, morphological and life-history variation drives the susceptibility of amphibians to wildfires. We document the first evidence of climate change-driven wildfires impacting temperate forest amphibian communities across a broad geographic area, which raises serious concern for the persistence of amphibians under an increasingly fire-prone climate.
Keywords:2019–2020 Australian Black Summer fires  community ecology  disturbance  fire severity  multispecies occupancy model  severe weather  threatened species
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号