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Published October 9, 2020 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Biodiversity and Forest structure one year following the 2016 Fort McMurray (Alberta) fire event

  • 1. Natural Resources Canada
  • 2. University of Alberta
  • 3. Metis Nation of Alberta*

Description

Exploration practices for oil sands developments in the boreal forest of western Canada create a network of thousands of kilometers of linear features, particularly seismic lines that dissect these forests posing significant environmental challenges. As wildfire is one of the prevalent stand-replacing natural disturbances in the Canadian boreal forest, it is an important driver of environmental change and stand development that may contribute to the mitigation of such linear industrial footprint. Here, we evaluate the short-term cumulative (also known as combined) effects of seismic lines and wildfire on biodiversity and site conditions. One year after the Horse River (Fort McMurray, Alberta) fire event in the spring of 2016, we compared dissected and undisturbed forests in burned and unburned boreal peatlands, assessing changes in overall stand structure and the responses of a variety of organisms. Soil moisture was significantly higher on seismic lines than in the adjacent forest, suggesting why most of the study sites within the fire perimeter showed little evidence of burning at the line in relation to the adjacent forest. Low fire severity on seismic lines seemed an important driver of local species diversity for ants, beetles, spiders, and plants in disturbed peatlands, resulting in similar species composition on seismic lines both within and outside the burned area, but different assemblages in burned and unburned adjacent forests. Our results suggest that fire did not erase seismic lines; rather, wildfire might increase the influence of this footprint on the recovering adjacent forest. Longer term monitoring will be necessary to understand how boreal treed peatlands respond to the cumulative effect of wildfire and linear disturbances.

Notes

Data are provided as eight tables in separate spreadsheets. The first data sheet provides a list of spider, carabid beetle, ant, vascular and non-vascular plant species with their corresponding species ID (used in the species matrices). There are six data sheets that contain the species abundance/percent cover fo the sampled taxa. The first three sheets contain standardized abundances (number of individuals per 120 trap days) of ground-dwelling spiders, carabid beetles and ants collected at each site. The following three sheets contain  the percent cover of understory, canopy and non-vascular plants at each site. These data are presented as matrices with rows representing habitats (burned and unburned seismic lines, forest edges and forest interior) at each site and columns representing species (species ID). The last data sheet contains information about site conditions and other environmental variables at each site.

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