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Impacts of fire and prospects for recovery in a tropical peat forest ecosystem.

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posted on 2025-08-02, 11:59 authored by ME Harrison, NJ Deere, MA Imron, D Nasir, Adul, HA Asti, J Aragay Soler, NC Boyd, SM Cheyne, SA Collins, LJ D'Arcy, WM Erb, H Green, W Healy, Hendri, B Holly, PR Houlihan, SJ Husson, Iwan, KA Jeffers, IP Kulu, K Kusin, NC Marchant, HC Morrogh-Bernard, SE Page, A Purwanto, B Ripoll Capilla, OR de Rivera Ortega, Santiano, KL Spencer, J Sugardjito, J Supriatna, SA Thornton, FJ Frank van Veen, Yulintine, MJ Struebig
Uncontrolled fires place considerable burdens on forest ecosystems, compromising our ability to meet conservation and restoration goals. A poor understanding of the impacts of fire on ecosystems and their biodiversity exacerbates this challenge, particularly in tropical regions where few studies have applied consistent analytical techniques to examine a broad range of ecological impacts over multiyear time frames. We compiled 16 y of data on ecosystem properties (17 variables) and biodiversity (21 variables) from a tropical peatland in Indonesia to assess fire impacts and infer the potential for recovery. Burned forest experienced altered structural and microclimatic conditions, resulting in a proliferation of nonforest vegetation and erosion of forest ecosystem properties and biodiversity. Compared to unburned forest, habitat structure, tree density, and canopy cover deteriorated by 58 to 98%, while declines in species diversity and abundance were most pronounced for trees, damselflies, and butterflies, particularly for forest specialist species. Tracking ecosystem property and biodiversity datasets over time revealed most to be sensitive to recurrent high-intensity fires within the wider landscape. These megafires immediately compromised water quality and tree reproductive phenology, crashing commercially valuable fish populations within 3 mo and driving a gradual decline in threatened vertebrates over 9 mo. Burned forest remained structurally compromised long after a burn event, but vegetation showed some signs of recovery over a 12-y period. Our findings demonstrate that, if left uncontrolled, fire may be a pervasive threat to the ecological functioning of tropical forests, underscoring the importance of fire prevention and long-term restoration efforts, as exemplified in Indonesia.

Funding

1525/UN1/DITLIT/Dit-Lit/PT.01.05/2022

Arcus Foundation

Chester Zoo

Darwin Initiative

Leverhulme Trust

NE/T010401/1

Ocean Park Conservation Foundation Hong Kong

Orangutan Appeal UK

Orangutan Land Trust

Orangutan Outreach

Panthera, The Clouded Leopard Project/Point Defiance Zoo and Aquarium

Save the Orangutan

The Orangutan Project

UK Research and Innovation

US Fish and Wildlife Service Great Apes Conservation Fund

Universitas Gadjah Mada

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Rights

© 2024 the Author(s). Published by PNAS. This open access article is distributed under Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 (CC BY)

Notes

This is the final version. Available from the National Academy of Sciences via the DOI in this record. Data, Materials, and Software Availability: Relevant data files have been deposited in the Environmental Information Data Centre

Journal

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Pagination

e2307216121-

Publisher

National Academy of Sciences

Place published

United States

Version

  • Version of Record

Language

en

FCD date

2024-05-14T15:04:15Z

FOA date

2024-05-14T15:11:39Z

Citation

Vol. 121, No. 17, article e2307216121

Department

  • Ecology and Conservation

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