# Response of the subalpine bunchgrasses to wildfires and its effects in the relative abundance of the volcano rabbit in the Ajusco-Chichinautzin Mountain Range

**Authors:** Juan M. Uriostegui-Velarde, Alberto González-Romero, Areli Rizo-Aguilar, Dennia Brito-González, José Antonio Guerrero

PMC · DOI: 10.7717/peerj.17510 · PeerJ · 2024-06-28

## TL;DR

This study examines how wildfires affect the habitat and population of the volcano rabbit in subalpine bunchgrass areas of Mexico.

## Contribution

The study provides insights into how volcano rabbits respond to wildfires and the factors influencing their reoccupation of burned areas.

## Key findings

- Volcano rabbits may reoccupy burned areas within a year if adjacent unburned habitats are present.
- The height of Muhlenbergia macroura bunchgrass and surrounding vegetation cover influence rabbit abundance.
- Forest dominance and large wildfires reduce rabbit latrines, while shrub and bunchgrass cover increase them.

## Abstract

The volcano rabbit (Romerolagus diazi) is a lagomorph endemic to the central mountains of the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt and is classified as threatened at extinction risk. It is a habitat specialist in bunchgrass communities. The annual wildfires that occur throughout its distribution range are a vulnerability factor for the species. However, the effects of wildfires on volcano rabbit populations are not fully understood. We evaluated the occupancy and change in the volcano rabbit relative abundance index in the burned bunchgrass communities of the Ajusco-Chichinautzin Mountain Range during an annual cycle of wildfire events. Additionally, we assessed the factors that favor and limit occupation and reoccupation by the volcano rabbit using the relative abundance index in burned plots as an indicator of these processes. The explanatory factors for the response of the volcano rabbit were its presence in the nearby unburned bunchgrasses, the height of three species of bunchgrass communities, the proportion of different types of vegetation cover within a 500 m radius around the burned plots, heterogeneity of the vegetation cover, and the extent of the wildfire. Statistical analyses indicated possible reoccupation in less than a year in burned bunchgrass communities adjacent to unburned bunchgrass communities with volcano rabbits. The relative abundance index of volcano rabbits was not favored when the maximum height of the Muhlenbergia macroura bunchgrass community was less than 0.77 m. When the vegetation around the burned plots was dominated by forest (cover >30% of the buffer) and the fire was extensive, the number of latrines decreased per month but increased when the bunchgrass and shrub cover was greater around the burned plots. While the statistical results are not conclusive, our findings indicate a direction for future projects, considering extensive monitoring to obtain a greater number of samples that contribute to consolidating the models presented.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Romerolagus diazi (taxon 48089), Muhlenbergia macroura (taxon 751679)

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Romerolagus diazi (volcano rabbit, species) [taxon 48089], Muhlenbergia macroura (species) [taxon 751679]

## Full text

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## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11216220/full.md

## References

63 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11216220/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11216220