Disturbance from traditional fire management in subalpine heathlands
increases Afro‐alpine plant resilience to climate change

Maria U. Johansson  Carl A. Frisk  Sileshi Nemomissa  Kristoffer Hylander
First published: 10 April 2018

Abstract: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/gcb.14121

Species are often controlled by biotic factors such as competition at the
warm edge of their distribution range. Disturbances at the treeline,
disrupting competitive dominance, may thus enable alpine species to utilize
lower altitudes. We searched for evidence for range expansion in grazed,
fire‐managed Ethiopian subalpine Erica heathlands across a 25‐year
chronosequence. We examined vascular plant composition in 48 plots (5 × 5
m) across an altitudinal range of 3,465–3,711 m.a.s.l. and analyzed how
community composition changed in relation to increasing competition over
time (using a Shade index based on Erica shrub height and cover) and
altitude. Species‘ habitats and altitudinal ranges were derived from
literature. Time since fire explained more variation (r2 = .41) in species
composition than altitude did (r2 = .32) in an NMDS analysis.
Community‐weighted altitudinal optima for species in a plot decreased
strongly with increasing shade (GLM, Standardized Regression Coefficient
SRC = −.41, p = .003), but increased only weakly with altitude (SRC = .26,
p = .054). In other words, young stands were dominated by species with
higher altitudinal optima than old stands. Forest species richness
increased with Log Shade index (SRC = .12, p = .008), but was unaffected by
altitude (SRC = −.07, p = .13). However, richness of alpine and heathland
species was not highest in plots with lowest Shade index, but displayed a
unimodal pattern with an initial increase, followed by a decrease when
shading increased (altitude was not significant). Our results indicate that
disturbance from the traditional patch burning increases the available
habitat for less competitive high‐altitude plants and prevents tree line
ascent. Therefore, maintaining, but regulating, the traditional land use
increases the Afro‐alpine flora's resilience to global warming. However,
this system is threatened by a new REDD+ program attempting to increase
carbon storage via fire suppression. This study highlights the importance
of understanding traditional management regimes for biodiversity
conservation in cultural landscapes in an era of global change.


Press Summary:
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/04/180416121541.htm

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