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5 July 2023 Birds and Bush Fires in African Savannahs
Leo Zwarts, Rob G. Bijlsma, Jan van der Kamp
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Abstract

Bush fires are widespread in African savannahs. Their impact on birds varies. Many insectivores temporarily profit from the insects escaping fire and smoke, whereas the burnt-through grass and herb layer facilitates feeding for some ground-foraging bird species. Nevertheless, bush fires have a direct, negative impact on many other ground-foraging birds. The average density of seed-eating birds in humid, African savannahs (annual rainfall >800 mm) was 15.9 birds/ha in unburned savannahs, compared to 3.3 birds/ ha (–72%) in recently burned areas. No such difference was found for insectivorous bird species. Eleven of the 13 common ground-foraging migratory bird species were not affected by bush fires in Africa because they spend the northern winter in the arid and semiarid zone, beyond the main bush-fire zone. In the long run, savannah-inhabitant birds profit from bush fires, simply because fires prevent open landscape from becoming overgrown with trees. However, the short-term implications of bush fires might be severe for seed-eating birds that rely on humid savannah, because of the more than 3 million km2 in Africa burned annually, most comprises humid savannah.

Leo Zwarts, Rob G. Bijlsma, and Jan van der Kamp "Birds and Bush Fires in African Savannahs," Ardea 111(1), 305-314, (5 July 2023). https://doi.org/10.5253/arde.2022.a27
Received: 6 February 2022; Accepted: 13 February 2022; Published: 5 July 2023
KEYWORDS
bush fire
granivorous birds
insectivorous birds
sahel
savannah
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