| Literature DB >> 20877720 |
Juliana M Silveira1, Jos Barlow, Julio Louzada, Paulo Moutinho.
Abstract
Fire is frequently used as a land management tool for cattle ranching and annual crops in the Amazon. However, these maintenance fires often escape into surrounding forests, with potentially severe impacts for forest biodiversity. We examined the effect of experimental fires on leaf-litter arthropod abundance in a seasonally-dry forest in the Brazilian Amazon. The study plots (50 ha each) included a thrice-burned forest and an unburned control forest. Pitfall-trap samples were collected at 160 randomly selected points in both plots, with sampling stratified across four intra-annual replicates across the dry and wet seasons, corresponding to 6, 8, 10 and 12 months after the most recent fire. Arthropods were identified to the level of order (separating Formicidae). In order to better understand the processes that determine arthropod abundance in thrice-burned forests, we measured canopy openness, understory density and litter depth. All arthropod taxa were significantly affected by fire and season. In addition, the interactions between burn treatment and season were highly significant for all taxa but Isoptera. The burned plot was characterized by a more open canopy, lower understory density and shallower litter depth. Hierarchical partitioning revealed that canopy openness was the most important factor explaining arthropod order abundances in the thrice-burned plot, whereas all three environmental variables were significant in the unburned control plot. These results reveal the marked impact of recurrent wildfires and seasonality on litter arthropods in this transitional forest, and demonstrate the overwhelming importance of canopy-openness in driving post-fire arthropod abundance.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20877720 PMCID: PMC2943466 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0012877
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Differences (mean ± SE) between forest structure variables collected in unburned and thrice-burned plots.
| Canopy openness (%) | Understory density (un) | Litter depth (cm) | ||
|
| February | 6.54±0.67 | 3.11±0.12 | 4.43±0.15 |
| August | 6.55±0.68 | 3.33±0.15 | 4.02±0.13 | |
|
| February | 22.07±1.60 | 0.86±0.12 | 1.35±0.06 |
| August | 22.15±1.59 | 0.69±0.08 | 1.01±0.02 | |
|
| Month | <0.001 | <0.001 | <0.001 |
| Treatment | <0.001 | <0.001 | <0.001 | |
| Month x Treatment | = 0.001 | >0.05 | = 0.01 |
Statistical results are from Analysis of Deviance using chi-square to test significance and based on quasi-Poisson (understory density and litter depth), and quasibinomial errors (proportion of canopy openness).
Figure 1Mean (± SE) abundance for all arthropods and the ten most abundant orders across the four sample periods, and rainfall (28 year average monthly) across the year.
Circles represent the unburned plot and triangles represent the thrice-burned plot. Circles in rainfall panel represent rainfall for the year of the study. Months in the x axis represent 6, 8, 10 and 12 months post-fire, respectively. F-values for Analysis of Deviance tests for treatment, sample and interaction between both are shown in this order in the panels. For all tests degrees of freedom for treatment = 1, 302, for sample = 3, 299, for plot x sample = 3, 296. All tests for treatment were highly significant (p<0.001). All tests for sample season were significant at p<0.001, except for Isoptera (p = 0.005). The interaction between treatment and season was significant for all taxa, except for Isoptera (p = 0.06).
Figure 2Distribution of the percentage of independent effects of environmental variables on arthropods in thrice-burned and unburned plots, and in the dry and wet seasons.
Black bars represent significant effects (p<0.05) as determined by randomization tests. Z-scores for the generated distribution of randomized I's (I value = the independent contribution towards explained variance in a multivariate dataset) and an indication of statistical significance. Z-scores are calculated as (observed – mean (randomizations))/SD(randomizations), and statistical significance is based on upper 0.95 confidence limit (Z≥1∶65). Positive or negative relationships are shown by + or –, respectively. R 2 dev (displayed in parenthesis under the seasons) is the total deviance explained by a generalized linear model including the three measured variables. LIT = litter depth, UND = understory density and CAN = canopy openness.