Increasing fire frequency and severity will increase habitat loss for a boreal forest indicator species

  • Eric C. Palm
  • , Michael J. Suitor
  • , Kyle Joly
  • , Jim D. Herriges
  • , Allicia P. Kelly
  • , Dave Hervieux
  • , Kelsey L.M. Russell
  • , Torsten W. Bentzen
  • , Nicholas C. Larter
  • , Mark Hebblewhite

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

25 Scopus citations

Abstract

Climate change will lead to more frequent and more severe fires in some areas of boreal forests, affecting the distribution and availability of late-successional forest communities. These forest communities help to protect globally significant carbon reserves beneath permafrost layers and provide habitat for many animal species, including forest-dwelling caribou. Many caribou populations are declining, yet the mechanisms by which changing fire regimes could affect caribou declines are poorly understood. We analyzed resource selection of 686 GPS-collared female caribou from three ecotypes and 15 populations in a ~600,000 km2 region of northwest Canada and eastern Alaska. These populations span a wide gradient of fire frequency but experience low levels of human-caused habitat disturbance. We used a mixed-effects modeling framework to characterize caribou resource selection in response to burns at different seasons and spatiotemporal scales, and to test for functional responses in resource selection to burn availability. We also tested mechanisms driving observed selection patterns using burn severity and lichen cover data. Caribou avoided burns more strongly during winter relative to summer and at larger spatiotemporal scales relative to smaller scales. During the winter, caribou consistently avoided burns at both spatiotemporal scales as burn availability increased, indicating little evidence of a functional response. However, they decreased their avoidance of burns during summer as burn availability increased. Burn availability explained more variation in caribou selection for burns than ecotype. Within burns, caribou strongly avoided severely burned areas in winter, and this avoidance lasted nearly 30 years after a fire. Caribou within burns also selected higher cover of terrestrial lichen (an important caribou food source). We found a negative relationship between burn severity and lichen cover, confirming that caribou avoidance of burns was consistent with lower lichen abundance. Consistent winter avoidance of burns and severely burned areas suggests that caribou will experience increasing winter habitat loss as fire frequency and severity increase. Our results highlight the potential for climate-induced alteration of natural disturbance regimes to affect boreal biodiversity through habitat loss. We suggest that management strategies prioritizing protection of core winter range habitat with lower burn probabilities would provide important climate-change refugia for caribou.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere2549
JournalEcological Applications
Volume32
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2022

Funding

We acknowledge support from the University of Montana, Alaska Department of Fish and Game, Alberta Environment and Parks, US Bureau of Land Management, Government of the Northwest Territories Department of Environment and Natural Resources, US National Park Service, and Yukon Government's Department of Environment. First Nations partners Sambaa K'e Dene Band, Fort Simpson Métis Local, The Denendeh Harvesters Committee of Líídlíí Kue First Nation (Fort Simpson), Jean Marie River First Nation, Pehdzeh Ki First Nation (Wrigley), Nahanni Butte Dene Band, Acho Dene Koe Band (Fort Liard) and Ka'a’gee Tu First Nation (Kakisa) supported boreal caribou collaring studies in the Northwest Territories. ECP received support from National Aeronautics and Space Agency's (NASA) Earth and Space Science Fellowship, Wildlife Conservation Society Canada's W. Garfield Weston Graduate Fellowship. MH and ECP acknowledge funding from NASA's Arctic Boreal Vulnerability Experiment grant no. NNX15AW71A. MH acknowledges funding from the National Science Foundation's Navigating the New Arctic grant #2127272. We acknowledge support from the University of Montana, Alaska Department of Fish and Game, Alberta Environment and Parks, US Bureau of Land Management, Government of the Northwest Territories Department of Environment and Natural Resources, US National Park Service, and Yukon Government's Department of Environment. First Nations partners Sambaa K'e Dene Band, Fort Simpson M?tis Local, The Denendeh Harvesters Committee of L??dl?? Kue First Nation (Fort Simpson), Jean Marie River First Nation, Pehdzeh Ki First Nation (Wrigley), Nahanni Butte Dene Band, Acho Dene Koe Band (Fort Liard) and Ka'a?gee Tu First Nation (Kakisa) supported boreal caribou collaring studies in the Northwest Territories. ECP received support from National Aeronautics and Space Agency's (NASA) Earth and Space Science Fellowship, Wildlife Conservation Society Canada's W. Garfield Weston Graduate Fellowship. MH and ECP acknowledge funding from NASA's Arctic Boreal Vulnerability Experiment grant no. NNX15AW71A. MH acknowledges funding from the National Science Foundation's Navigating the New Arctic grant #2127272.

FundersFunder number
NNX15AW71A
2127272
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Hornocker Wildlife Institute/Wildlife Conservation Society
Bureau of Land Management
Alaska Department of Fish and Game

    Keywords

    • boreal forest
    • burn severity
    • caribou
    • climate change
    • fire
    • functional response
    • habitat
    • late-successional forest
    • resource selection

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'Increasing fire frequency and severity will increase habitat loss for a boreal forest indicator species'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this