4.7 Article

Recent fire history and connectivity patterns determine bird species distribution dynamics in landscapes dominated by land abandonment

期刊

LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY
卷 27, 期 2, 页码 171-184

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10980-011-9695-y

关键词

Colonisation dynamics; Connectivity; Fire history; Habitat configuration; Land-use changes; Land abandonment; Open-habitat bird species; Potential dispersal flux

资金

  1. Spanish Ministry of Education and Science [CGL2005-00031/BOS, AGL2009-07140]
  2. European Community
  3. Spanish government

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Mediterranean landscapes are suffering two opposing forces leading to large-scale changes in species distribution: land abandonment of less productive areas and an increase in wildfire impact. Here, we test the hypothesis that fires occurred in recent decades drive the pattern of expansion of early-successional, open-habitat bird species by aiding in the process of colonisation of newly burnt areas. The study was carried out in Catalonia (NE Spain). We selected 44 burnt sites occurring between 2000 and 2005 to model colonisation patterns under different assumptions of potential colonisers' sources and evaluated the colonisation estimates with empirical data on six bird species especially collected for this purpose. We first defined three landscape scenarios serving as surrogates of potential colonisers' sources: open-habitats created by fire, shrublands and farmlands. Then, we used a parameter derived from a functional connectivity metric to estimate species colonization dynamics on the selected sites by each particular scenario. Finally, we evaluated our colonisation estimates with the species occurrence in the studied locations by using generalized linear mixed models. The occurrence of the focal species on the newly burnt sites was significantly related to the connectivity patterns described by both the recent fire history and the other open-habitat types generated by a different type of disturbance. We suggest that land use changes in recent decades have produced a shift in the relative importance of habitats acting as reservoirs for open-habitat bird species dynamics in Mediterranean areas. Before the middle of the twentieth century species' reservoirs were probably constituted by relatively static open habitats (grassland and farmland), whereas afterwards they likely consist of a shifting mosaic of habitat patches where fire plays a key role as connectivity provider and largely contributes to the maintenance of species persistence.

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