Aerial Insect Biodiversity Responses to Prescribed Fire in an Eastern Grassland Habitat

Author/Creator

Author/Creator ORCID

Department

Hood College Biology

Program

Hood College Biomedical and Environmental Science

Citation of Original Publication

Rights

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States

Abstract

Grasslands in the Eastern United States are a biodiverse, but quickly vanishing, habitat type. Public land managers are beginning to incorporate prescribed fire into these fire-adapted systems to achieve cultural and natural resource conservation goals. While the effects of fire on plants are more widely documented, knowledge regarding the effects of fire on insect communities remains sparse. Following a prescribed burn in western Maryland, USA, no changes in community assemblage, species richness, or species diversity were found, but a significant decline in insect abundance was found. Insect species richness and abundance followed common growing season trends, peaking in mid-summer. Although these results follow general trends supported by global meta-analysis of insect community response to fire, the site and habitat specific responses of taxa make it difficult for public land managers to make species-specific management decisions without further detailed research.