Synergistic effects of the components of global change: Increased vegetation dynamics in open, forest-steppe grasslands driven by wildfires and year-to-year precipitation differences

PLoS One. 2017 Nov 17;12(11):e0188260. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0188260. eCollection 2017.

Abstract

Climate change and land use change are two major elements of human-induced global environmental change. In temperate grasslands and woodlands, increasing frequency of extreme weather events like droughts and increasing severity of wildfires has altered the structure and dynamics of vegetation. In this paper, we studied the impact of wildfires and the year-to-year differences in precipitation on species composition changes in semi-arid grasslands of a forest-steppe complex ecosystem which has been partially disturbed by wildfires. Particularly, we investigated both how long-term compositional dissimilarity changes and species richness are affected by year-to-year precipitation differences on burnt and unburnt areas. Study sites were located in central Hungary, in protected areas characterized by partially-burnt, juniper-poplar forest-steppe complexes of high biodiversity. Data were used from two long-term monitoring sites in the Kiskunság National Park, both characterized by the same habitat complex. We investigated the variation in species composition as a function of time using distance decay methodology. In each sampling area, compositional dissimilarity increased with the time elapsed between the sampling events, and species richness differences increased with increasing precipitation differences between consecutive years. We found that both the long-term compositional dissimilarity, and the year-to-year changes in species richness were higher in the burnt areas than in the unburnt ones. The long-term compositional dissimilarities were mostly caused by perennial species, while the year-to-year changes of species richness were driven by annual and biennial species. As the effect of the year-to-year variation in precipitation was more pronounced in the burnt areas, we conclude that canopy removal by wildfires and extreme inter-annual variability of precipitation, two components of global environmental change, act in a synergistic way. They enhance the effect of one another, resulting in greater long-term and year-to-year changes in the composition of grasslands.

MeSH terms

  • Biodiversity*
  • Climate Change
  • Conservation of Natural Resources*
  • Droughts
  • Forests
  • Hungary
  • Models, Statistical*
  • Population Dynamics
  • Rain
  • Wildfires / statistics & numerical data*

Grants and funding

Országos Tudományos Kutatási Alapprogramok (HU) Grant Nos. F5254, T29703, and A08-1-2009-0051 funded field observation design, data acquisition, data managament, analysis, and preparing the publication. Nemzeti Kutatási és Fejlesztési Program (HU) Grant Nos. NKFP 3B-0008/2002 and NKFP 6-0013/2005 funded data acquisition and managament. Sixth Framework Programme (BE) GOCE-CT-2003-505298 funded data acquisition and managament. LIFE Programme (BE) Grant No. LIFE08 ENV/IT/000399 funded data acquisition and managament. Seventh Framework Programme (BE) FP7-262060 funded data acquisition and managament. Gazdaságfejlesztési és Innovációs Operatív Program (HU) GINOP 2.3.3-15-2016-00019 funded preparing the publication.