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      Number of different insecta groups and its dynamics on burned areas after megafires (second year of study)

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      BIO Web of Conferences
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          Abstract

          The paper describes the results of studying the insect fauna after the megafires of 2021. Studied of 30,721 individuals from 10 insect orders were obtained for study in 2023, the second year after the megafires. We have established that in the traps were dominated by taxa from the orders Lepidoptera, Coleoptera, Neuroptera, and Hymenoptera. It is shown that the remaining orders were relatively few in number and occurred as single specimens. It is noted that the number of species belonging to the orders Heteroptera, Neuroptera, Lepidoptera, Hymenoptera, Mecoptera, and Trichoptera increased in 2023 in comparison to the previous year. As a result of this the number of individuals of the Heteroptera (4.8 times), the Neuroptera (3.2 times), and the Lepidoptera (2.0 times) increased significantly in the second year after megafires. It is shown that the seasonal dynamics was characterized by the configuration observed in insects native to temperate zones, with a single maximum observed in either July or August.

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          The 2019/2020 mega-fires exposed Australian ecosystems to an unprecedented extent of high-severity fire

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            Animal movements in fire-prone landscapes

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              Biodiversity and resilience of arthropod communities after fire disturbance in temperate forests.

              Changes in ecosystem functions following disturbances are of central concern in ecology and a challenge for ecologists is to understand the factors that affect the resilience of community structures and ecosystem functions. In many forest ecosystems, one such important natural disturbance is fire. The aim of this study was to understand the variation of resilience in six functional groups of invertebrates in response to different fire frequencies in southern Switzerland. We measured resilience by analysing arthropod species composition, abundance and diversity in plots where the elapsed time after single or repeated fires, as determined by dendrochronology, varied. We compared data from these plots with data from plots that had not burned recently and defined high resilience as the rapid recovery of the species composition to that prior to fire. Pooling all functional groups showed that they were more resilient to single fires than to repeated events, recovering 6-14 years after a single fire, but only 17-24 years after the last of several fires. Flying zoophagous and phytophagous arthropods were the most resilient groups. Pollinophagous and epigaeic zoophagous species showed intermediate resilience, while ground-litter saprophagous and saproxylophagous arthropods clearly displayed the lowest resilience to fire. Their species composition 17-24 years post-burn still differed markedly from that of the unburned control plots. Depending on the fire history of a forest plot, we found significant differences in the dominance hierarchy among invertebrate species. Any attempt to imitate natural disturbances, such as fire, through forest management must take into account the recovery times of biodiversity, including functional group composition, to ensure the conservation of multiple taxa and ecosystem functions in a sustainable manner.

                Author and article information

                Journal
                BIO Web of Conferences
                BIO Web Conf.
                EDP Sciences
                2117-4458
                2024
                July 12 2024
                2024
                : 118
                : 02006
                Article
                10.1051/bioconf/202411802006
                329fcd05-bab1-4b1a-81ac-c228c55c2de5
                © 2024

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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