A novel, post‐Soviet fire disturbance regime drives bird diversity and abundance on the Eurasian steppe

Author:

Bhagwat Tejas1ORCID,Kuemmerle Tobias23ORCID,Soofi Mahmood124ORCID,Donald Paul F.5ORCID,Hölzel Norbert6ORCID,Salemgareev Albert7,Stirnemann Ingrid6,Urazaliyev Ruslan67,Baumann Matthias2ORCID,Kamp Johannes1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Conservation Biology University of Göttingen Göttingen Germany

2. Conservation Biogeography Lab, Geography Department Humboldt University Berlin Germany

3. Integrative Research Institute on Transformations of Human‐Environment Systems (IRI THESys) Humboldt‐University Berlin Berlin Germany

4. CSIRO, Land and Water Darwin Australian Capital Territory Australia

5. BirdLife International Cambridge UK

6. Institute of Landscape Ecology University of Münster Münster Germany

7. Association for the Conservation of Biodiversity in Kazakhstan (ACBK) Astana Kazakhstan

Abstract

AbstractMany grassland ecosystems and their associated biodiversity depend on the interactions between fire and land‐use, both of which are shaped by socioeconomic conditions. The Eurasian steppe biome, much of it situated in Kazakhstan, contains 10% of the world's remaining grasslands. The break‐up of the Soviet Union in 1991, widespread land abandonment and massive declines in wild and domestic ungulates led to biomass accumulation over millions of hectares. This rapid fuel increase made the steppes a global fire hotspot, with major changes in vegetation structure. Yet, the response of steppe biodiversity to these changes remains unexplored. We utilized a unique bird abundance dataset covering the entire Kazakh steppe and semi‐desert regions together with the MODIS burned area product. We modeled the response of bird species richness and abundance as a function of fire disturbance variables—fire extent, cumulative burned area, fire frequency—at varying grazing intensity. Bird species richness was impacted negatively by large fire extent, cumulative burned area, and high fire frequency in moderately grazed and ungrazed steppe. Similarly, overall bird abundance was impacted negatively by large fire extent, cumulative burned area and higher fire frequency in the moderately grazed steppe, ungrazed steppe, and ungrazed semi‐deserts. At the species level, the effect of high fire disturbance was negative for more species than positive. There were considerable fire legacy effects, detectable for at least 8 years. We conclude that the increase in fire disturbance across the post‐Soviet Eurasian steppe has led to strong declines in bird abundance and pronounced changes in community assembly. To gain back control over wildfires and prevent further biodiversity loss, restoration of wild herbivore populations and traditional domestic ungulate grazing systems seems much needed.

Funder

Volkswagen Foundation

Georg-August-Universität Göttingen

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Environmental Science,Ecology,Environmental Chemistry,Global and Planetary Change

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