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Linking fuel, habitat and ground-dwelling mammals in flammable landscapes.
- Source :
- Forest Ecology & Management; Jun2019, Vol. 441, p215-228, 14p
- Publication Year :
- 2019
-
Abstract
- • Relationships between fuel and habitat components depend on productivity. • Eight out of nine mammal species associated more strongly with habitat than fuel. • Seven species were correlated with components of fuel. • Fuel components can be useful surrogates for habitat and mammal occurrence. Prescribed fire is often applied with the goal of reducing fuel loads and lessening the impact of future wildfires on humans. As fuel represents habitat for some animal species, fuel reduction treatments are likely to affect species' access to resources. Understanding the interrelationships between fuel, habitat and animal occurrence will help managers of flammable landscapes meet the dual objective of reducing fuel loads and conserving biodiversity. In addition, should fuel hazard assessments reflect habitat structure, fuel hazard scores could be used to predict the response of animals to prescribed fire. This would be useful in many regions where fuel hazard assessments are routinely conducted, but data about habitat change or the direct response of animals are lacking. In this study, we tested the capacity of fuel hazard scores to predict both habitat structure and ground-dwelling mammal occurrence at 187 sites in the Otway Ranges, south-eastern Australia. First, we explored relationships between habitat structure and fuel hazard. Second, we investigated how animals responded to both habitat and fuel. Habitat complexity was positively related to overall fuel hazard, although this varied with net primary productivity. Habitat attributes were best at predicting the occurrence of eight out of nine ground-dwelling mammal species, although seven species were also correlated with components of fuel hazard. Some species were not strongly associated with either habitat or fuel. These species-specific relationships between habitat, fuel and fauna highlight the continuing importance of measuring habitat or animals directly when investigating faunal responses to disturbance. However, in the absence of these data, fire managers can use a common fuel assessment method to predict the effect of fuel reduction on habitat structure and the occurrence of some ground-dwelling mammals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 03781127
- Volume :
- 441
- Database :
- Supplemental Index
- Journal :
- Forest Ecology & Management
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 136224318
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2019.03.021