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Is Response to Fire Influenced by Dietary Specialization and Mobility? A Comparative Study with Multiple Animal Assemblages

Fire is a major agent involved in landscape transformation and an indirect cause of changes in species composition. Responses to fire may vary greatly depending on life histories and functional traits of species. We have examined the taxonomic and functional responses to fire of eight taxonomic anim...

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Autores principales: Santos, Xavier, Mateos, Eduardo, Bros, Vicenç, Brotons, Lluís, De Mas, Eva, Herraiz, Joan A., Herrando, Sergi, Miño, Àngel, Olmo-Vidal, Josep M., Quesada, Javier, Ribes, Jordi, Sabaté, Santiago, Sauras-Yera, Teresa, Serra, Antoni, Vallejo, V. Ramón, Viñolas, Amador
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3917858/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24516616
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0088224
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author Santos, Xavier
Mateos, Eduardo
Bros, Vicenç
Brotons, Lluís
De Mas, Eva
Herraiz, Joan A.
Herrando, Sergi
Miño, Àngel
Olmo-Vidal, Josep M.
Quesada, Javier
Ribes, Jordi
Sabaté, Santiago
Sauras-Yera, Teresa
Serra, Antoni
Vallejo, V. Ramón
Viñolas, Amador
author_facet Santos, Xavier
Mateos, Eduardo
Bros, Vicenç
Brotons, Lluís
De Mas, Eva
Herraiz, Joan A.
Herrando, Sergi
Miño, Àngel
Olmo-Vidal, Josep M.
Quesada, Javier
Ribes, Jordi
Sabaté, Santiago
Sauras-Yera, Teresa
Serra, Antoni
Vallejo, V. Ramón
Viñolas, Amador
author_sort Santos, Xavier
collection PubMed
description Fire is a major agent involved in landscape transformation and an indirect cause of changes in species composition. Responses to fire may vary greatly depending on life histories and functional traits of species. We have examined the taxonomic and functional responses to fire of eight taxonomic animal groups displaying a gradient of dietary and mobility patterns: Gastropoda, Heteroptera, Formicidae, Coleoptera, Araneae, Orthoptera, Reptilia and Aves. The fieldwork was conducted in a Mediterranean protected area on 3 sites (one unburnt and two burnt with different postfire management practices) with five replicates per site. We collected information from 4606 specimens from 274 animal species. Similarity in species composition and abundance between areas was measured by the Bray-Curtis index and ANOSIM, and comparisons between animal and plant responses by Mantel tests. We analyze whether groups with the highest percentage of omnivorous species, these species being more generalist in their dietary habits, show weak responses to fire (i.e. more similarity between burnt and unburnt areas), and independent responses to changes in vegetation. We also explore how mobility, i.e. dispersal ability, influences responses to fire. Our results demonstrate that differences in species composition and abundance between burnt and unburnt areas differed among groups. We found a tendency towards presenting lower differences between areas for groups with higher percentages of omnivorous species. Moreover, taxa with a higher percentage of omnivorous species had significantly more independent responses of changes in vegetation. High- (e.g. Aves) and low-mobility (e.g. Gastropoda) groups had the strongest responses to fire (higher R scores of the ANOSIM); however, we failed to find a significant general pattern with all the groups according to their mobility. Our results partially support the idea that functional traits underlie the response of organisms to environmental changes caused by fire.
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spelling pubmed-39178582014-02-10 Is Response to Fire Influenced by Dietary Specialization and Mobility? A Comparative Study with Multiple Animal Assemblages Santos, Xavier Mateos, Eduardo Bros, Vicenç Brotons, Lluís De Mas, Eva Herraiz, Joan A. Herrando, Sergi Miño, Àngel Olmo-Vidal, Josep M. Quesada, Javier Ribes, Jordi Sabaté, Santiago Sauras-Yera, Teresa Serra, Antoni Vallejo, V. Ramón Viñolas, Amador PLoS One Research Article Fire is a major agent involved in landscape transformation and an indirect cause of changes in species composition. Responses to fire may vary greatly depending on life histories and functional traits of species. We have examined the taxonomic and functional responses to fire of eight taxonomic animal groups displaying a gradient of dietary and mobility patterns: Gastropoda, Heteroptera, Formicidae, Coleoptera, Araneae, Orthoptera, Reptilia and Aves. The fieldwork was conducted in a Mediterranean protected area on 3 sites (one unburnt and two burnt with different postfire management practices) with five replicates per site. We collected information from 4606 specimens from 274 animal species. Similarity in species composition and abundance between areas was measured by the Bray-Curtis index and ANOSIM, and comparisons between animal and plant responses by Mantel tests. We analyze whether groups with the highest percentage of omnivorous species, these species being more generalist in their dietary habits, show weak responses to fire (i.e. more similarity between burnt and unburnt areas), and independent responses to changes in vegetation. We also explore how mobility, i.e. dispersal ability, influences responses to fire. Our results demonstrate that differences in species composition and abundance between burnt and unburnt areas differed among groups. We found a tendency towards presenting lower differences between areas for groups with higher percentages of omnivorous species. Moreover, taxa with a higher percentage of omnivorous species had significantly more independent responses of changes in vegetation. High- (e.g. Aves) and low-mobility (e.g. Gastropoda) groups had the strongest responses to fire (higher R scores of the ANOSIM); however, we failed to find a significant general pattern with all the groups according to their mobility. Our results partially support the idea that functional traits underlie the response of organisms to environmental changes caused by fire. Public Library of Science 2014-02-07 /pmc/articles/PMC3917858/ /pubmed/24516616 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0088224 Text en © 2014 Santos et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Santos, Xavier
Mateos, Eduardo
Bros, Vicenç
Brotons, Lluís
De Mas, Eva
Herraiz, Joan A.
Herrando, Sergi
Miño, Àngel
Olmo-Vidal, Josep M.
Quesada, Javier
Ribes, Jordi
Sabaté, Santiago
Sauras-Yera, Teresa
Serra, Antoni
Vallejo, V. Ramón
Viñolas, Amador
Is Response to Fire Influenced by Dietary Specialization and Mobility? A Comparative Study with Multiple Animal Assemblages
title Is Response to Fire Influenced by Dietary Specialization and Mobility? A Comparative Study with Multiple Animal Assemblages
title_full Is Response to Fire Influenced by Dietary Specialization and Mobility? A Comparative Study with Multiple Animal Assemblages
title_fullStr Is Response to Fire Influenced by Dietary Specialization and Mobility? A Comparative Study with Multiple Animal Assemblages
title_full_unstemmed Is Response to Fire Influenced by Dietary Specialization and Mobility? A Comparative Study with Multiple Animal Assemblages
title_short Is Response to Fire Influenced by Dietary Specialization and Mobility? A Comparative Study with Multiple Animal Assemblages
title_sort is response to fire influenced by dietary specialization and mobility? a comparative study with multiple animal assemblages
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3917858/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24516616
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0088224
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