Long-term recovery of Mediterranean ant and bee communities after fire in southern Spain.

Sci Total Environ

Estación Biológica de Doñana, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC), Av. Americo Vespucio 26, 41092 Sevilla, Spain. Electronic address:

Published: August 2023

Wildfires play a determinant role in the composition and structure of animal communities, especially for groups closely associated with the vegetation and soil, such as bees or ants. The effects of fire on animal communities depend on the functional traits of each group. Here, we assessed the impacts of fire and time since fire on the taxonomic and functional responses of ant and bee communities. We sampled 35 pine forests in Andalusia (southern Spain) that had experienced fire in the past (0 to 41 years ago). Specifically, we explored whether a) fire increased taxonomic and functional diversity and changed community composition in communities in the short term and b) fire influence (increase or decrease) on ant communities would be dependent on time since fire. We found that ant and bee taxonomic richness increased regardless of time since fire. Different approaches gave the same result, such as taxonomic diversity indexes (ant abundance, ant richness and ant Shannon diversity index), the changes in species richness in ant and bee communities, as well as the higher number of ant and bee species prone to the burned habitat than to the unburned habitat, using the I Index. Besides environmental variables (such as the effects of different Pinus species or elevation), time since fire changed the taxonomic composition of ant communities and the functional composition of bee communities. Moreover, six of the 13 ant functional traits explored differed between burned and unburned areas, with the degree of difference declining as time since fire increased. For example, burned areas contained ant communities with more ground-nesting species and strictly diurnal species, functional traits that are characteristic of open areas. In contrast, other traits persisted in burned areas over the long term, notably a higher degree of worker polymorphism and species monogyny. Our study shows how much short- and long-term effects of fire on ant and bee communities differ; while richness increases in the long-term, some functional traits are also filtered in the short-term. We suggest that fire in Mediterranean coniferous ecosystems could have a positive effect on these groups and should not be overlooked.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.164132DOI Listing

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