Thursday
Aug282014
« Can Burning Benefit Insects in Isolated Prairies? »
Thursday, August 28, 2014 at 2:37PM
The lack of long term data looking at how invertebrates respond to prescribed fire led Ron Panzer to conduct a six year study spanning three states. Invertebrates were grouped by their dependence on remnant prairie sites and populations tracked through multiple burns to determine rates of recovery.
Implications for Management:
- Annual fires may not allow a long enough recovery time for a minority subset of prairie insects
- Burning every 2-3 years may balance concerns over insect recovery with other conservation goals (e.g., plants, birds)
- Remnant dependent insects recover at the same rate as remnant independent insects
For a summary of the study's results and implications for management, you can view or download a PDF version of "Can burning benefit insects in isolated prairies?"
This research brief for research managers summarizes the following peer-reviewed publication:
Ron Panzer. 2002. Compatibility of prescribed burning with the conservation of insects in small, isolated, prairie reserves. Conservation Biology 16:1296-1307.
More briefs are available on our Research Briefs Blog.
tagged research briefs in Summer '14