Using a Cultural Keystone Species in Participatory Monitoring of Fire Management in Indigenous Lands in the Brazilian Savanna

Author:

Falleiro Rodrigo de Moraes1,Moura Lívia Carvalho2ORCID,Xerente Pedro Paulo3,Pinto Charles Pereira1,Santana Marcelo Trindade14,Corrêa Maristella Aparecida3,Schmidt Isabel Belloni5

Affiliation:

1. Brazilian Institute of the Environment and Renewable Natural Resources-Ibama, SCEN—Edifício Sede do Ibama, Brasília 70818-900, DF, Brazil

2. Institute Society, Population and Nature—ISPN, SHCGN 709, Bloco E, Loja 38, Brasília 70750-515, DF, Brazil

3. National Indigenous People Foundation-Funai, SBS, Quadra 02, Lote 14, Bloco H, Ed. Cleto Meireles, Brasília 70070-120, DF, Brazil

4. Maki Planet Systems, Suite 4, Level 16, Bligh Street, Sydney, NSW 200, Australia

5. Departamento de Ecologia, Instituto de Ciências Biológicas, University of Brasília-UnB, Brasília 70910-900, DF, Brazil

Abstract

There is a consensus that fire should be actively managed in tropical savannas to decrease wildfire risks, firefighting costs, and social conflicts as well as to promote ecosystem conservation. Selection and participatory monitoring of the effects of fire on cultural keystone species may be an efficient way to involve local stakeholders and inform management decisions. In this study, we investigated the effects of different fire regimes on a cultural keystone species in Central Brazil. With the support of diverse multiethnic groups of local fire brigades, we sampled Hancornia speciosa (Apocynaceae) populations across a vast regional range of 18 traditional territories (Indigenous Lands and Quilombola Territories) as well as four restricted Protected Areas. We considered areas under wildfires (WF), prescribed burns (PB) and fire exclusion (FE) and quantified tree mortality, canopy damage, loss of reproductive structures and fruit production following a simplified field protocol. Areas with H. speciosa populations were identified and classified according to their fire history, and in each sampled area, adult plants were evaluated. We hypothesized that WF would have larger negative impact on the population parameters measured, while FE would increase plant survival and fruit production. We found that tree mortality, canopy damage, and loss of reproductive structures were higher in areas affected by wildfires, which also had the lowest fruit production per plant compared to PB and FE areas, corroborating our hypotheses. However, we also found higher mortality in FE areas compared to PB ones, probably due to plant diseases in areas with longer FE. Considering these results and that the attempts to exclude fire from fire-prone ecosystems commonly lead to periodic wildfires, we argue that the Integrated Fire Management program in course in federal Protected Areas in Brazil—based on early dry season prescribed fires—is a good management option for this, and likely other, cultural keystone species in the Brazilian savanna.

Funder

Prevfogo/Ibama

CNPq

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference71 articles.

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2. Myers, R.L. (2006). Living with Fire—Sustaining Ecosystems & Livelihoods through Integrated Fire Management, Global Fire Initiative.

3. The need for a consistent fire policy for Cerrado conservation;Durigan;J. Appl. Ecol.,2016

4. Good fire, bad fire: It depends on who burns;Berlinck;Flora,2020

5. Woody encroachment and its consequences on hydrological processes in the savannah;Honda;Philos. Trans. R. Soc. B,2016

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