Effects of fire management on the richness and abundance of central North American grassland land snail faunas

The land snail faunas from 72 upland and lowland grassland sites from central North America were analyzed. Sixteen of these had been exposed to fire management within the last 15 years, while the remainder had not. A total of 91,074 individuals in 72 different species were observed. Richness was red...

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Main Author: Nekola, J. C.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Museu de Ciències Naturals de Barcelona 2002-01-01
Series:Animal Biodiversity and Conservation
Subjects:
Online Access:http://abc.museucienciesjournals.cat/files/ABC-25-2-pp-53-66.pdf
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spelling doaj-325eae8fa0a745b2b6fabf7df6dfe7532020-11-24T21:55:23ZengMuseu de Ciències Naturals de BarcelonaAnimal Biodiversity and Conservation1578-665X2002-01-012525366Effects of fire management on the richness and abundance of central North American grassland land snail faunasNekola, J. C.The land snail faunas from 72 upland and lowland grassland sites from central North America were analyzed. Sixteen of these had been exposed to fire management within the last 15 years, while the remainder had not. A total of 91,074 individuals in 72 different species were observed. Richness was reduced by approximately 30% on burned sites, while abundance was reduced by 50-90%. One-way ANOVA of all sites (using management type as the independent variable), a full 2-way ANOVA (using management and grassland type) of all sites, and a 2-way ANOVA limited to 26 sites paired according to their habitat type and geographic location, demonstrated in all cases a highly significant (up to p < 0.0005) reduction in richness and abundance on fire managed sites. Contingency table analysis of individual species demonstrated that 44% experienced a significant reduction in abundance on fire-managed sites. Only six species positively responded to fire. Comparisons of fire response to the general ecological preferences of these species demonstrated that fully 72% of turf-specialists were negatively impacted by fire, while 67% of duff-specialists demonstrated no significant response. These differences were highly significant (p = 0.0006). Thus, frequent use of fire management represents a significant threat to the health and diversity of North American grassland land snail communities. Protecting this fauna will require the preservation of site organic litter layers, which will require the increase of fire return intervals to 15+ years in conjunction with use of more diversified methods to remove woody and invasive plants. http://abc.museucienciesjournals.cat/files/ABC-25-2-pp-53-66.pdfLand snailBiodiversityConservationFire managementGrasslandNorth America
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nekola, J. C.
spellingShingle Nekola, J. C.
Effects of fire management on the richness and abundance of central North American grassland land snail faunas
Animal Biodiversity and Conservation
Land snail
Biodiversity
Conservation
Fire management
Grassland
North America
author_facet Nekola, J. C.
author_sort Nekola, J. C.
title Effects of fire management on the richness and abundance of central North American grassland land snail faunas
title_short Effects of fire management on the richness and abundance of central North American grassland land snail faunas
title_full Effects of fire management on the richness and abundance of central North American grassland land snail faunas
title_fullStr Effects of fire management on the richness and abundance of central North American grassland land snail faunas
title_full_unstemmed Effects of fire management on the richness and abundance of central North American grassland land snail faunas
title_sort effects of fire management on the richness and abundance of central north american grassland land snail faunas
publisher Museu de Ciències Naturals de Barcelona
series Animal Biodiversity and Conservation
issn 1578-665X
publishDate 2002-01-01
description The land snail faunas from 72 upland and lowland grassland sites from central North America were analyzed. Sixteen of these had been exposed to fire management within the last 15 years, while the remainder had not. A total of 91,074 individuals in 72 different species were observed. Richness was reduced by approximately 30% on burned sites, while abundance was reduced by 50-90%. One-way ANOVA of all sites (using management type as the independent variable), a full 2-way ANOVA (using management and grassland type) of all sites, and a 2-way ANOVA limited to 26 sites paired according to their habitat type and geographic location, demonstrated in all cases a highly significant (up to p < 0.0005) reduction in richness and abundance on fire managed sites. Contingency table analysis of individual species demonstrated that 44% experienced a significant reduction in abundance on fire-managed sites. Only six species positively responded to fire. Comparisons of fire response to the general ecological preferences of these species demonstrated that fully 72% of turf-specialists were negatively impacted by fire, while 67% of duff-specialists demonstrated no significant response. These differences were highly significant (p = 0.0006). Thus, frequent use of fire management represents a significant threat to the health and diversity of North American grassland land snail communities. Protecting this fauna will require the preservation of site organic litter layers, which will require the increase of fire return intervals to 15+ years in conjunction with use of more diversified methods to remove woody and invasive plants.
topic Land snail
Biodiversity
Conservation
Fire management
Grassland
North America
url http://abc.museucienciesjournals.cat/files/ABC-25-2-pp-53-66.pdf
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