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Effects of intense wildfires on the nesting ecology of oviparous montane lizards
Authors:Richard Shine  Gregory P Brown  Melanie J Elphick
Institution:School of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales 2006, Australia
Abstract:In midsummer 2002–2003, intense wildfires raged through the Brindabella Range of south‐eastern Australia, including sites where we have studied the ecology of scincid lizards (especially Bassiana duperreyi) for decades. Data‐loggers measured the thermal regimes experienced by eggs during these fires (revealing lethally high temperatures in nests under logs in the forest but minimal effect in nests under rocks in clearings). Eggs from forest‐clearing nests hatched successfully. Reproductive output of lizards in one area was reduced in the years post‐fire (perhaps because of inadequate food insect] abundance to fuel female reproduction) but soon recovered. The fires reduced vegetation density and thus increased the availability of sun‐exposed rocks that serve as potential nest sites. However, the magnitude and duration of these effects differed among sites. Five years after these intense fires, canopy openness (and thus, sunlight penetration to create thermally suitable nest sites) was indistinguishable from pre‐fire conditions. Our data reveal strong spatial heterogeneity both in the immediate effects of fire on lizard reproduction and in longer‐term post‐fire changes in habitat quality. Surprisingly, these intense wildfires had only transitory and local effects on nest‐site availability for the heliothermic lizards that we study, but impacts likely were more severe on sympatric taxa that depend upon moist cool microhabitats.
Keywords:nest‐site availability  reproduction  Scincidae  thermal biology
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