4.7 Article

Prescribed burning reduces the abundance of den sites for a hollow-using mammal in a dry forest ecosystem

Journal

FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
Volume 429, Issue -, Pages 233-243

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.foreco.2018.07.023

Keywords

Tree hollow; Cavity; Antechinus flavipes; Fire; Box-ironbark; Australia

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Funding

  1. Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning
  2. Parks Victoria
  3. Deakin University
  4. La Trobe University
  5. Holsworth Wildlife Foundation

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Prescribed burning is used in fire-prone environments worldwide to reduce fuel loads and the severity and spread of future wildfires. Forest habitat structures, such as large trees, dead trees and logs are highly flammable, yet also are essential for animal species that require hollows (cavities) as den sites for shelter and reproduction. We examined the effects of experimental prescribed burns on the use of den sites by a small marsupial, the yellow-footed antechinus Antechinus flavipes, in south-eastern Australia. Specifically, we radio-tracked individual A. flavipes to identify forest habitat structures preferred as den sites and recorded the fate of known den sites following patchy prescribed burns. We found that large living trees and dead trees were used as den sites disproportionately to their relative abundance in the forest. While all marked individuals of A. flavipes survived the immediate impacts of patchy prescribed burns, almost a third (16/52) of den sites identified before burning were lost, including 17% of trees (4/23) and 48% of logs (10/21). The vulnerability of den sites to prescribed burns can be attributed to the decay-dependent effect of fire on both trees and logs, whereby, the amount of damage from fire is related to the structure's pre-fire condition (i.e. whether dead or alive, amount of decay). Large trees and large logs are scarce in this dry forest ecosystem and their replacement is likely to take a century or more due to the slow growth rates of trees. The ecological impacts of prescribed burning on habitat structures used by A. flavipes and other hollow-using species can be moderated by: (1) carrying out patchy, rather than complete burns; (2) ensuring the inter-fire interval is sufficient to allow time for replenishment of resources; and (3) planning at a regional scale to maintain an appropriate spatial pattern of post-fire age-classes, including areas retained as long-unburned (e.g. > 50 years) in which resources such as deep litter, large logs and dead trees can accumulate.

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