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Habitat selection by spotted owls after a megafire reflects their adaptation to historical frequent-fire regimes
Authors:Jones  Gavin M  Kramer  H Anu  Whitmore  Sheila A  Berigan  William J  Tempel  Douglas J  Wood  Connor M  Hobart  Brendan K  Erker  Tedward  Atuo  Fidelis A  Pietrunti  Nicole F  Kelsey  Rodd  Gutiérrez  R J  Peery  M Zachariah
Institution:1.Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, USA
;2.Department of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA
;3.The Nature Conservancy, Sacramento, CA, USA
;4.Department of Fisheries, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN, USA
;
Abstract:Context

Climate and land-use change have led to disturbance regimes in many ecosystems without a historical analog, leading to uncertainty about how species adapted to past conditions will respond to novel post-disturbance landscapes.

Objectives

We examined habitat selection by spotted owls in a post-fire landscape. We tested whether selection or avoidance of severely burned areas could be explained by patch size or configuration, and whether variation in selection among individuals could be explained by differences in habitat availability.

Methods

We applied mixed-effects models to GPS data from 20 spotted owls in the Sierra Nevada, California, USA, with individual owls occupying home ranges spanning a broad range of post-fire conditions after the 2014 King Fire.

Results

Individual spotted owls whose home ranges experienced less severe fire (<?5% of home range severely burned) tended to select severely burned forest, but owls avoided severely burned forest when more of their home range was affected (~ 5–40%). Owls also tended to select severe fire patches that were smaller in size and more complex in shape, and rarely traveled?>?100-m into severe fire patches. Spotted owls avoided areas that had experienced post-fire salvage logging but the interpretation of this effect was nuanced. Owls also avoided areas that were classified as open and/or young forest prior to the fire.

Conclusions

Our results support the hypothesis that spotted owls are adapted to historical fire regimes characterized by small severe fire patches in this region. Shifts in disturbance regimes that produce novel landscape patterns characterized by large, homogeneous patches of high-severity fire may negatively affect this species.

Keywords:
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