Effects of burn severity and postfire salvage logging on carnivore communities in montane forests

Author:

Volkmann Logan A1ORCID,Hodges Karen E1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, University of British Columbia Okanagan , Science Building, 1177 Research Road, Kelowna, BC V1V1V7 , Canada

Abstract

Abstract Wildfire and postfire salvage logging are major drivers of forest succession in western North America. Although postfire landscapes support a variety of carnivore species, it is unclear how these animals respond to differing patterns and severities of burning, or to additional landscape change from postfire salvage logging. Open, early-seral habitats created by these disturbances are predicted to benefit generalists such as coyotes (Canis latrans) and weasels (Mustela spp.), but restrict the activity of forest specialists such as Canadaian Lynx (Lynx canadensis) and Pacific Marten (Martes caurina). We used winter track surveys, supplemented with remote cameras, to examine carnivore habitat use in and around large, mixed-severity burns in north-central Washington, United States (burned in 2006), and central British Columbia, Canada (burned in 2010, then partially salvage-logged; some areas reburned in 2017). At 10 to 13 years postfire, marten had similar detection rates across lightly and severely burned areas of the 2006 burn, as did coyotes. Marten selected lightly burned areas of the 2010 burn (6 to 9 years postfire) over higher burn severities, and selected burns over adjacent unburned forests. Weasels selected areas of higher burn severity on both landscapes, while Lynx selected lower burn severities. Weasels and coyotes selected areas with a greater proportion of salvage-logged habitat in the 2010 burn, while marten, lynx, and wolves (Canis lupus) avoided areas with salvage logging. Fishers (Pekania pennanti) showed no clear patterns of selection or avoidance in relation to burn severity or salvage logging. Burn severity strongly influences wildlife activity postfire; lightly burned residual habitats are critical for forest specialists. Postfire salvage logging alters carnivore communities and may hinder species that require structurally complex landscapes.

Funder

Habitat Conservation Trust Foundation

Forest Enhancement Society of British Columbia

Skagit Wildlife Research Grant Program

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Killam Trusts

University of British Columbia

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference107 articles.

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2. The landscape ecology of western forest fire regimes;Agee;Northwest Science,1998

3. Coyote and Wolf habitat use in northwestern Montana;Arjo;Northwest Science,2004

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