Data from: Where do animals come from during post-fire population recovery? Implications for ecological and genetic patterns in post-fire landscapes
Identifying where animals come from during population recovery can help to understand the impacts of disturbance events and regimes on species distributions and genetic diversity. Alternative recovery processes for animal populations affected by fire include external recolonization, nucleated recove...
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Zusammenfassung: | Identifying where animals come from during population recovery can help to
understand the impacts of disturbance events and regimes on species
distributions and genetic diversity. Alternative recovery processes for
animal populations affected by fire include external recolonization,
nucleated recovery from refuges, or in situ survival and population
growth. We used simulations to develop hypotheses about ecological and
genetic patterns corresponding to these alternative models. We tested
these hypotheses in a study of the recovery of two small mammals, the
Australian bush rat and the agile antechinus, after a large
(>50,000 ha), severe wildfire. The abundance of both species was
severely reduced by fire and recovered to near or above pre-fire levels
within two generations, yet we rejected a hypothesis of recovery by
external recolonization. While the agile antechinus showed genetic
evidence for far greater dispersal capacity than the bush rat, neither
species showed gradients in abundance or genetic diversity with distance
from unburnt forest during population recovery. Population recovery was
driven by local-scale processes. However, the mechanisms differed between
species, resulting from the spatial impacts of fire on habitat
suitability. Agile antechinus populations recovered through population
growth from in situ survivors. The bush rat followed a model of nucleated
recovery, involving local recolonization from micro-refuges in topographic
drainage lines. Nucleated recovery by the bush rat was associated with
changes in dispersal, and fine-scale patterns of genetic admixture. We
identified increased dispersal by females during recovery, contrasting
with male-biased dispersal in unburnt forest. Such flexibility in
dispersal can potentially increase recovery rates compared to expectations
based on dispersal behavior within undisturbed populations. Our study
shows how the initial distribution of survivors, determined by fire
effects on resource distribution, determines the subsequent scaling of
population recovery patterns, and the sensitivity of population
distribution and genetic diversity to changing disturbance regimes. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.k47b2 |