The fire pulse: wildfire stimulates flux of aquatic prey to terrestrial habitats driving increases in riparian consumers

Author:

Malison Rachel L.1,Baxter Colden V.1

Affiliation:

1. Stream Ecology Center, Department of Biological Sciences, Idaho State University, Pocatello, ID 83209, USA.

Abstract

We investigated the midterm effects of wildfire (in this case, five years after the fire) of varying severity on periphyton, benthic invertebrates, emerging adult aquatic insects, spiders, and bats by comparing unburned sites with those exposed to low severity (riparian vegetation burned but canopy intact) and high severity (canopy completely removed) wildfire. We observed no difference in periphyton chlorophyll a or ash-free dry mass among different burn categories but did observe significantly greater biomass of benthic invertebrates in both high severity burned and unburned reaches versus low severity burned reaches. Moreover, a significantly greater flux of adult aquatic insect emergence occurred at sites that experienced high severity fire versus low severity burned and unburned sites. The greatest number of spiders and bat echolocation calls were also observed at sites of high severity fire. Our results suggest that fires of different severity may have very different affects on stream-riparian food webs and that high severity wildfire may lead to an extended “fire pulse” that stimulates aquatic productivity and flux of prey to terrestrial habitats, driving local increases in riparian consumers.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference56 articles.

1. Agee, J.K. 1993. Fire ecology of Pacific Northwest forests. Island Press, Washington, D.C.

2. Allan, J.D., and Castillo, M.M. 2007. Stream ecology: structure and function of running waters. Springer, Dordrecht, the Netherlands.

3. American Public Health Association. 1995. Standard methods for the examination of water and wastewater. American Public Health Association (APHA), Washington, D.C.

4. INTERACTIONS AMONG FIRE, ASPEN, AND ELK AFFECT INSECT DIVERSITY: REVERSAL OF A COMMUNITY RESPONSE

5. Tangled webs: reciprocal flows of invertebrate prey link streams and riparian zones

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