Publications by authors named "Andrew F Bennett"

Article Synopsis
  • Natural capital accounting can aid farmers in addressing supply chain impacts on biodiversity and reversing declines in farmland biodiversity.
  • Current methods mainly focus on regional scales and struggle to effectively represent biodiversity, especially for fauna.
  • By surveying bird populations across numerous farms, a framework for evaluating farm-scale biodiversity has been developed, linking bird species richness to specific ecosystem conditions and providing metrics for quantifying a farm’s biodiversity impact and conservation contributions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • In fire-prone areas, the diversity of animal species, particularly birds, is influenced by the availability of resources that develop after fires, and this can be managed through planned burning.
  • A study surveyed bird occurrences across various sites in southeastern Australia over a 75-year period after fire, revealing that time since fire significantly impacts the presence of many bird species.
  • The research indicates that current fire management practices focused primarily on plant diversity may not adequately support bird populations that require longer periods without fire, highlighting a potential disconnect between plant and animal management needs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Revegetation plantings are a key activity in farmland restoration and are commonly assumed to support biotic communities that, with time, replicate those of reference habitats. Restoration outcomes, however, can be highly variable and difficult to predict; hence there is value in quantifying restoration success to improve future efforts. We test the expectation that, over time, revegetation will restore bird communities to match those in reference habitats; and assess whether specific planting attributes enhance restoration success.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Ecosystem engineers like the superb lyrebird significantly modify soil and litter in forest environments, which can enhance seed germination rates.
  • A two-year study in Victoria, Australia, assessed the effects of lyrebird engineering versus herbivory from large mammals on vegetation, showing that engineering increased germination but herbivory negatively impacted plant density and diversity.
  • Overall, both processes affect forest-floor vegetation, suggesting that increased seed germination due to lyrebird activity might help plants adapt and evolve over time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

To mitigate the impact of severe wildfire on human society and the environment, prescribed fire is widely used in forest ecosystems to reduce fuel loads and limit fire spread. To avoid detrimental effects on conservation values, it is imperative to understand how prescribed fire affects taxa having a range of different adaptations to disturbance. Such studies will have greatest benefit if they extend beyond short-term impacts of burning.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Biodiversity faces many threats and these can interact to produce outcomes that may not be predicted by considering their effects in isolation. Habitat loss and fragmentation (hereafter 'fragmentation') and altered fire regimes are important threats to biodiversity, but their interactions have not been systematically evaluated across the globe. In this comprehensive synthesis, including 162 papers which provided 274 cases, we offer a framework for understanding how fire interacts with fragmentation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Fire has been a source of global biodiversity for millions of years. However, interactions with anthropogenic drivers such as climate change, land use, and invasive species are changing the nature of fire activity and its impacts. We review how such changes are threatening species with extinction and transforming terrestrial ecosystems.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Ecosystem engineers physically modify their environment, thereby altering habitats for other organisms. Increasingly, "engineers" are recognized as an important focus for conservation and ecological restoration because their actions affect a range of ecosystem processes and thereby influence how ecosystems function. The Superb Lyrebird Menura novaehollandiae is proposed as an ecosystem engineer in forests of southeastern Australia due to the volume of soil and litter it turns over when foraging.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Wildfire refugia (unburnt patches within large wildfires) are important for the persistence of fire-sensitive species across forested landscapes globally. A key challenge is to identify the factors that determine the distribution of fire refugia across space and time. In particular, determining the relative influence of climatic and landscape factors is important in order to understand likely changes in the distribution of wildfire refugia under future climates.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Movement is crucial in ecosystems affected by disturbances like fire, yet its role in helping animals respond to fire has not been widely studied.* -
  • The text examines how fire impacts animal movement between habitats, influencing species distributions and behaviors from daily foraging to migration, while also considering long-term changes post-fire.* -
  • It highlights challenges posed by altered fire regimes and invasive species, calls for better data to understand these movements, and proposes a research agenda to combine movement ecology and fire ecology effectively.*
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Many large-scale connectivity initiatives have been proposed around the world with the aim of maintaining or restoring connectivity to offset the impacts on biodiversity of habitat loss and fragmentation. Frequently, these are based on the requirements of a single focal species of concern, but there is growing attention to identifying connectivity requirements for multi-species assemblages. A number of methods for modelling connectivity have been developed; likewise, different approaches have been used to construct resistance surfaces, the basic input data for connectivity analyses.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Rare species can play important functional roles, but human-induced changes to disturbance regimes, such as fire, can inadvertently affect these species. We examined the influence of prescribed burns on the recruitment and diversity of plant species within a temperate forest in southeastern Australia, with a focus on species that were rare prior to burning. Floristic composition was compared among plots in landscapes before and after treatment with prescribed burns differing in the extent of area burnt and season of burn (before-after, control-impact design).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Prescribed burning to achieve management objectives is a common practice in fire-prone regions worldwide. Structural components of habitat that are combustible and slow to develop are particularly susceptible to change associated with prescribed burning. We used an experimental, "whole-landscape" approach to investigate the effect of differing patterns of prescribed burning on key habitat components (logs, stumps, dead trees, litter cover, litter depth, and understorey vegetation).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Fire plays an important role in structuring vegetation in fire-prone regions worldwide. Progress has been made towards documenting the effects of individual fire events and fire regimes on vegetation structure; less is known of how different fire history attributes (e.g.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In agricultural regions worldwide, linear networks of vegetation such as hedges, fencerows and live fences provide habitat for plant and animal species in heavily modified landscapes. In Australia, networks of remnant native vegetation along roadsides are a distinctive feature of many rural landscapes. Here, we investigated the richness and composition of woodland-dependent bird communities in networks of eucalypt woodland vegetation along roadsides, in an agricultural region in which >80% of native woodland and forest vegetation has been cleared.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Understanding the age structure of vegetation is important for effective land management, especially in fire-prone landscapes where the effects of fire can persist for decades and centuries. In many parts of the world, such information is limited due to an inability to map disturbance histories before the availability of satellite images (~1972). Here, we describe a method for creating a spatial model of the age structure of canopy species that established pre-1972.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Extreme weather events, such as drought, have marked impacts on biotic communities. In many regions, a predicted increase in occurrence of such events will be imposed on landscapes already heavily modified by human land use. There is an urgency, therefore, to understand the way in which the effects of such events may be exacerbated, or moderated, by different patterns of landscape change.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Termites play an important ecological role in many ecosystems, particularly in nutrient-poor arid and semi-arid environments. We examined the distribution and occurrence of termites in the fire-prone, semi-arid mallee region of south-eastern Australia. In addition to periodic large wildfires, land managers use fire as a tool to achieve both asset protection and ecological outcomes in this region.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Understanding what constitutes high quality habitat is crucial for the conservation of species, especially those threatened with extinction. Habitat quality frequently is inferred by comparing the attributes of sites where a species is present with those where it is absent. However, species presence may not always indicate high quality habitat.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Fire is used as a management tool for biodiversity conservation worldwide. A common objective is to avoid population extinctions due to inappropriate fire regimes. However, in many ecosystems, it is unclear what mix of fire histories will achieve this goal.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Fire is a major disturbance process in many ecosystems world-wide, resulting in spatially and temporally dynamic landscapes. For populations occupying such environments, fire-induced landscape change is likely to influence population processes, and genetic patterns and structure among populations. The Mallee Emu-wren Stipiturus mallee is an endangered passerine whose global distribution is confined to fire-prone, semi-arid mallee shrublands in south-eastern Australia.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Fire is both a widespread natural disturbance that affects the distribution of species and a tool that can be used to manage habitats for species. Knowledge of temporal changes in the occurrence of species after fire is essential for conservation management in fire-prone environments. Two key issues are: whether postfire responses of species are idiosyncratic or if multiple species show a limited number of similar responses; and whether such responses to time since fire can predict the occurrence of species across broad spatial scales.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Inference concerning the impact of habitat fragmentation on dispersal and gene flow is a key theme in landscape genetics. Recently, the ability of established approaches to identify reliably the differential effects of landscape structure (e.g.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

1. Informative Bayesian priors can improve the precision of estimates in ecological studies or estimate parameters for which little or no information is available. While Bayesian analyses are becoming more popular in ecology, the use of strongly informative priors remains rare, perhaps because examples of informative priors are not readily available in the published literature.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF