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The role of fire in terrestrial vertebrate...
Journal article

The role of fire in terrestrial vertebrate richness patterns

Abstract

Productivity is strongly associated with terrestrial species richness patterns, although the mechanisms underpinning such patterns have long been debated. Despite considerable consumption of primary productivity by fire, its influence on global diversity has received relatively little study. Here we examine the sensitivity of terrestrial vertebrate biodiversity (amphibians, birds and mammals) to fire, while accounting for other drivers. We analyse global data on terrestrial vertebrate richness, net primary productivity, fire occurrence (fraction of productivity consumed) and additional influences unrelated to productivity (i.e., historical phylogenetic and area effects) on species richness. For birds, fire is associated with higher diversity, rivalling the effects of productivity on richness, and for mammals, fire's positive association with diversity is even stronger than productivity; for amphibians, in contrast, there are few clear associations. Our findings suggest an underappreciated role for fire in the generation of animal species richness and the conservation of global biodiversity.

Authors

Moritz MA; Batllori E; Bolker BM

Journal

Ecology Letters, Vol. 26, No. 4, pp. 563–574

Publisher

Wiley

Publication Date

April 1, 2023

DOI

10.1111/ele.14177

ISSN

1461-023X

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