Recent fire in a Mediterranean ecosystem strengthens hoverfly populations and their interaction networks with plants

Author:

Nakas Georgios1ORCID,Kantsa Aphrodite2ORCID,Vujić Ante3,Mescher Mark C.2ORCID,De Moraes Consuelo Μ.2ORCID,Petanidou Theodora1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geography University of the Aegean Mytilene Greece

2. Department of Environmental System Sciences ETH Zürich Zürich Switzerland

3. Department of Biology and Ecology, Faculty of Sciences University of Novi Sad Novi Sad Serbia

Abstract

AbstractFire affects many critical ecological processes, including pollination, and effects of climate change on fire regimes may have profound consequences that are difficult to predict. Considerable work has examined effects of fire on pollinator diversity, but relatively few studies have examined these effects on interaction networks including those of pollinators other than bees. We examined the effects of a severe wildfire on hoverfly pollinators in a Mediterranean island system. Using data collected over 3 consecutive years at burnt and unburnt sites, we documented differences in species diversity, abundance, and functional traits, as well as hoverfly interactions with flowering plants. Hoverfly abundance and species richness peaked during the first post‐fire flowering season (year 1), which coincided with the presence of many opportunistic species. Also in year 1, hoverfly pollination networks were larger, less specialized, more nested, and less modular at burnt (vs. unburnt) sites; furthermore, these networks exhibited higher phylogenetic host‐plant diversity. These effects declined over the next 2 years, with burnt and unburnt sites converging in similarity to hoverfly communities and interaction networks. While data obtained over 3 years provide a clear timeline of initial post‐fire recovery, we emphasize the importance of longer‐term monitoring for understanding the responses of natural communities to wildfires, which are projected to become more frequent and more destructive in the future.

Funder

Hellenic Foundation for Research and Innovation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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