How do invasive predators and their native prey respond to prescribed fire?

Author:

Watchorn Darcy J.1ORCID,Doherty Tim S.23,Wilson Barbara A.1,Garkaklis Mark J.4,Driscoll Don A.1

Affiliation:

1. School of Life and Environmental Sciences (Burwood Campus) Deakin University Geelong Victoria Australia

2. School of Life and Environmental Sciences The University of Sydney Sydney New South Wales Australia

3. Biodiversity and Conservation Science Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions Woodvale Western Australia Australia

4. State of the Environment Pty Ltd Aireys Inlet Victoria Australia

Abstract

AbstractFire shapes animal communities by altering resource availability and species interactions, including between predators and prey. In Australia, there is particular concern that two highly damaging invasive predators, the feral cat (Felis catus) and European red fox (Vulpes vulpes), increase their activity in recently burnt areas and exert greater predation pressure on the native prey due to their increased exposure. We tested how prescribed fire occurrence and extent, along with fire history, vegetation, topography, and distance to anthropogenic features (towns and farms), affected the activity (detection frequency) of cats, foxes, and the native mammal community in south‐eastern Australia. We used camera traps to quantify mammal activity before and after a prescribed burn and statistically tested how the fire interacted with these habitat variables to affect mammal activity. We found little evidence that the prescribed fire influenced the activity of cats and foxes and no evidence of an effect on kangaroo or small mammal (<800 g) activity. Medium‐sized mammals (800–2000 g) were negatively associated with prescribed fire extent, suggesting that prescribed fire has a negative impact on these species in the short term. The lack of a clear activity increase from cats and foxes is likely a positive outcome from a fire management perspective. However, we highlight that their response is likely dependent upon factors like fire size, severity, and prey availability. Future experiments should incorporate GPS‐trackers to record fine‐scale movements of cats and foxes in temperate ecosystems immediately before and after prescribed fire to best inform management within protected areas.

Funder

Hermon Slade Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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