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Orientador(es)
Resumo(s)
Rewilding has been proposed as an opportunity for biodiversity conservation in abandoned landscapes. However,
rewilding is challenged by the increasing fire risk associated with more flammable landscapes, and the
loss of open-habitat specialist species. Contrastingly, supporting High Nature Value farmlands (HNVf) has been
also highlighted as a valuable option, but the effective implementation of agricultural policies often fails leading
to uncertain scenarios wherein the effects of wildfire management remain largely unexplored. Herein, we simulated
fire-landscape dynamics to evaluate howfire suppression scenarios affect fire regime and biodiversity (102
species of vertebrates) under rewilding and HNVf policies in the future (2050), in a transnational biosphere reserve
(Gerês-Xurés Mountains, Portugal-Spain). Rewilding and HNVf scenarios were modulated by three different
levels of fire suppression effectiveness. Then, we quantified scenario effects on fire regime (burned and
suppressed areas) and biodiversity (habitat suitability change for 2050). Simulations confirm HNVf as a longterm
opportunity for fire suppression (up to 30,000 ha of additional suppressed areas between 2031 and 2050 in comparison to rewilding scenario) and for conservation (benefiting around 60% of species). Rewilding benefits
some species (20%), including critically endangered, vulnerable and endemic taxa, while several species (33%)
also profit from open habitats created by fire. Although HNVf remains the best scenario, rewilding reinforced
by low fire suppression management may provide a nature-based solution when societal support through
agricultural policies fails
Descrição
Palavras-chave
biodiversity conservation high nature value farmlands land use Southern Europe wildfires
Contexto Educativo
Citação
J.C. Campos, J. Bernhardt, N. Aquilué, et al., Using fire to enhance rewildingwhen agricultural policies fail, Science of the Total Environment
Editora
Elsevier
