Although an intuitive notion of community complexity is well established in ecological theory, its quantitative definition in other than just surrogate terms continues to elude the practitioners of the art. We examine the notion in its broad sense and develop a new measure based on the average lengt
The fire and flammability niches in plant communities
โ Scribed by Hugh P. Possingham; Hugh N. Comins; Ian R. Noble
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1995
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 499 KB
- Volume
- 174
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-5193
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
We construct a model of a multispecies forest that is often affected by major fires and explicitly incorporates life-history attributes of trees that are related to fire-flammability and susceptibility to fire. The model is used to explore coexistence mechanisms in forests; two fire-dependent coexistence mechanisms were identified. The first allows coexistence along a temporal axis since the last fire; this niche axis is well documented in the literature. The second coexistence mechanism relies on the influence of tree flammability on the incidence of fires and/or tree reproductive success. This ''flammability niche'' is explored in detail, with particular reference to eucalypt forests in Australia and Tasmania. Using the technique of linearized stability analysis about a positive equilibrium, we explored the local stability of assemblages with randomly generated life-history attributes. A robust and testable prediction of the model is that two species of fire-adapted tree are likely to coexist with a late-successional species if their flammabilities are very different, and if the most flammable species is more susceptible to fire but less likely to die as a result of non-fire causes. Our results have implications for managing fire-dependent ecosystems to maintain biodiversity. Although the motivation for this paper is observations on Australian eucalypt forests, the principles of coexistence that we discuss apply to all fire-prone forest and woodland ecosystems.
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