P. Kutiel, SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL HETEROGENEITY OF SPECIES-DIVERSITY IN A MEDITERRANEAN ECOSYSTEM FOLLOWING FIRE, International journal of wildland fire, 7(4), 1997, pp. 307-315
This study examines species richness, species diversity (H'-Shannon-We
iner Index) and species dominance (C- Simpson-Index) in a Mediterranea
n ecosystem as a function of time elapsed since fire and the extent to
which micro-climate regulates these indexes after wildfire occurrence
. The study was conducted in an eastern Mediterranean ecosystem (Israe
l) over three consecutive years. About 400 ha of a mixed oak - pine fo
rest burned in the summer of 1983 and part of it also suffered from a
repeat fire in the summer of 1989. Different trends for each parameter
and for each slope aspect (north and south) were observed indicating
different fire intensities and frequencies, and different physical con
ditions characterizing each of the slope aspects. Species richness on
the northern slope was the highest 2 - 4 years after fire followed by
a decrease with time elapsed since fire. A recurrent fire on the south
ern slope caused a decrease in species richness two years after fire,
which increased a year later to the level observed in the unburned for
est. Species diversity, however, increased after fire on both aspects,
reaching lower values 10 years later and then increased again, but st
ill to values lower than those obtained 2 - 4 years after fire. The ra
te of change is higher on the southern slope than that on the northern
one. The different trends following fire indicate that high temporal
and spatial variability both in the micro- and macroscales exist in th
is region.