Authors
Heloise Gibb, Joshua J Grubb, Dennis Black, Nick Porch, Orsolya Decker, Melodie McGeoch, David Deane, Nicholas Murphy
Publication date
2023/11
Journal
Austral Ecology
Volume
48
Issue
7
Pages
1328-1343
Description
Climate change is increasing the frequency of extreme fires. In 2019–2020, extreme fires burned 97 000 km2 of native vegetation in south‐eastern Australia, affecting many areas of rainforest, which has historically burned less frequently. One year post‐fires, we surveyed litter macroinvertebrates in 52 temperate rainforest sites. Sites had experienced increasing levels of fire severity (unburnt, medium severity and high severity). We asked how fire severity affected: (1) litter macroinvertebrate habitats; (2) the abundance of litter macroinvertebrate taxa per unit area; and (3) abundance relative to litter habitat (volumetric density). We also estimated the loss of litter macroinvertebrates across rainforests in the study region. High severity burns supported only a fifth of the litter volume and canopy cover as unburnt sites, lower soil moisture and higher herb cover. Medium burns were intermediate. Macroinvertebrate …
Total citations
2023202442
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