GSTDTAP  > 气候变化
DOI10.1016/j.foreco.2017.12.016
Reptile and amphibian response to season of burn in an upland hardwood forest
Greenberg, Cathryn H.1; Seiboldt, Tyler2; Keyser, Tara L.1; McNab, W. Henry1; Scott, Patrick3; Bush, Janis2; Moorman, Christopher E.4
2018-02-01
发表期刊FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
ISSN0378-1127
EISSN1872-7042
出版年2018
卷号409页码:808-816
文章类型Article
语种英语
国家USA
英文摘要

Growing-season burns are increasingly used in upland hardwood forest for multiple forest management goals. Many species of reptiles and amphibians are ground-dwelling, potentially increasing their vulnerability to prescribed fire, especially during the growing-season when they are most active. We used drift fences with pitfall traps to experimentally assess how herpetofaunal species and communities responded to early, growing-season burns, dormant-season burns, and unburned controls. We documented no adverse effects of either growing season burns or dormant-season burns on any common herpetofaunal taxa, but capture rates of total, adult, and juvenile five-lined skinks (Plestiodon fasciatus) were greater following growing-season burns. Most measurements reflected little or transient change in forest structure. However, canopy cover decreased by an average of 16% in growing-season burns within four growing-seasons of burning, with some tree mortality in patches where fire temperature likely was hotter. Our study suggests that even modest reductions in canopy cover may positively affect relative abundance and reproductive success of P. fasciatus. We cautiously suggest that a higher mean ground-level fire temperature and the physiologically active condition of vegetation in growing-season burns interacted to damage a greater proportion of trees, resulting in more canopy thinning than in dormant-season burns. However, weather, fuel types and condition, vegetation structure, and topography interact to affect fire intensity and the level of mortality or damage to canopy trees within and among stands, regardless of season conducted. We suggest that herpetofaunal response, for the species we studied, is more closely linked to change in canopy cover than to season of burn per se.


英文关键词Amphibians Growing-season burn Herpetofauna Lizard Prescribed fire Plestiodon fasciatus Reptiles Terrestrial salamanders Season of burn
领域气候变化
收录类别SCI-E
WOS记录号WOS:000425578000078
WOS关键词SOUTHEASTERN UNITED-STATES ; FUEL REDUCTION TREATMENTS ; TERRESTRIAL SALAMANDERS ; PRESCRIBED FIRE ; SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS ; EUMECES-FASCIATUS ; SMALL MAMMALS ; CANOPY GAPS ; SHORT-TERM ; ABUNDANCE
WOS类目Forestry
WOS研究方向Forestry
引用统计
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.173/C666/handle/2XK7JSWQ/22624
专题气候变化
作者单位1.US Forest Serv, USDA, Southern Res Stn, Bent Creek Expt Forest, 1577 Brevard Rd, Asheville, NC 28806 USA;
2.Univ Texas San Antonio, Coll Sci, Dept Environm Sci & Ecol, One UTSA Circle, San Antonio, TX 78249 USA;
3.US Forest Serv, USDA, Pisgah Natl Forest, 1600 Pisgah Highway, Pisgah Forest, NC 28768 USA;
4.North Carolina State Univ, Dept Forestry & Environm Resources, Fisheries Wildlife & Conservat Biol Program, Raleigh, NC 27695 USA
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GB/T 7714
Greenberg, Cathryn H.,Seiboldt, Tyler,Keyser, Tara L.,et al. Reptile and amphibian response to season of burn in an upland hardwood forest[J]. FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT,2018,409:808-816.
APA Greenberg, Cathryn H..,Seiboldt, Tyler.,Keyser, Tara L..,McNab, W. Henry.,Scott, Patrick.,...&Moorman, Christopher E..(2018).Reptile and amphibian response to season of burn in an upland hardwood forest.FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT,409,808-816.
MLA Greenberg, Cathryn H.,et al."Reptile and amphibian response to season of burn in an upland hardwood forest".FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT 409(2018):808-816.
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