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Efectos del Tamaño de Fuego Prescrito sobre la Depredación de Insectos de una Especie Perenne Rara de Pastizal
Author(s) -
Vickery Peter D.
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
conservation biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.2
H-Index - 222
eISSN - 1523-1739
pISSN - 0888-8892
DOI - 10.1046/j.1523-1739.2002.00494.x
Subject(s) - predation , grassland , ecology , habitat , perennial plant , fauna , seed predation , biology , invertebrate , fire regime , geography , ecosystem , population , biological dispersal , seed dispersal , demography , sociology
Loss of native grassland habitat in New England has reached>90%. Consequently, remaining grasslands persist as small, geographically isolated fragments, and populations of many plants and animals have declined or disappeared. Given the rarity of the fauna and flora of these habitats, ecological management of many of the remaining native grassland fragments in a manner that attempts to mimic natural processes has been intensive, and the effects of this management on some taxa, such as grassland birds, are now well understood. But the effects of management, especially prescribed fire, on native plants and invertebrates are less well known. I studied the effects of prescribed fire on northern blazing star ( Liatris scariosa var . novae‐angliae ), a rare grassland perennial endemic to the northeastern United States. Once distributed from southern Maine to northern New Jersey, northern blazing star has disappeared from 69% of the sites where it formerly occurred. Seed predation appears to be a critical proximate factor limiting recruitment of juveniles into local populations. Seven of 8 study sites in Maine and Massachusetts had a 65% average rate of seed predation, and there was no evidence of juvenile recruitment at these sites. None of these sites had been burned in the past 5 years. Experimental research at Kennebunk, Maine, demonstrated that, in the absence of fire, seed viability of northern blazing star was low, the result of larval microlepidopteran ( moth) predators in the flower heads. Prescribed fire temporarily reduced seed predation from approximately 90% to approximately 16% for 1 year following fire, but seed‐predation levels once again approached 90% within 2 years. Prescribed fires larger than 13 ha helped reduce predation rates, but fires smaller than 6 ha did not, suggesting that dispersal of adult moths from unburned source areas was spatially limited. Preferably, prescribed burns should be larger than 10 ha, large enough to have core areas larger than 100 m from adjoining unburned units. My results suggest that prescribed fire should be an important component of habitat management for northern blazing star, and they emphasize the need to carefully study the effects of the spatial scale of prescribed fires in other geographic regions and for a broad range of taxa.