# Fire and Herbivory as Architects of Mediterranean Biodiversity

**Authors:** Marion Lestienne, Pauline Saurat, Christel Vidaller, Gwendal Mouden, Andy Hennebelle, Lisa Bajolle, Bérangère Leys

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/ece3.72534 · Ecology and Evolution · 2025-11-20

## TL;DR

Over 8000 years, herbivores and fire together shaped biodiversity in Mediterranean ecosystems by maintaining open, diverse habitats.

## Contribution

A long-term palaeoecological reconstruction showing herbivory as a key driver of biodiversity and fire regimes in Mediterranean landscapes.

## Key findings

- High herbivore density correlates with open, flammable, and biodiverse habitats.
- Cooler, wetter climates led to closed forests with lower biodiversity and fire risk.
- Recent herbivore decline has increased fire-prone vegetation, raising landscape combustibility.

## Abstract

Reconstructing the long‐term interactions between fire and herbivory is essential to understand how Mediterranean vegetation has historically responded to disturbance regimes which is a critical step for informing current biodiversity and fire management strategies. We reconstructed 8000 years of vegetation composition, habitat combustibility, and herbivore density in southern France using pollen data and coprophilous fungal spores. We show that periods of high‐herbivore density systematically co‐occur with open, highly flammable habitats, and significantly correlate with elevated palynological richness. Conversely, cooler and wetter climatic phases promoted the development of closed‐canopy, low‐combustibility forests, which consistently exhibited lower biodiversity levels. In recent centuries, a documented decline in mammal herbivory pressure has coincided with the expansion of fire‐prone vegetation types such as garrigue and green oak coppice, exacerbating landscape combustibility under climate change. Our 8000‐years reconstruction highlights herbivory as a persistent and quantifiable driver of habitat openness, heterogeneity, and fire regime modulation. Synthesis: Our study demonstrates that herbivores and fire have jointly shaped Mediterranean biodiversity over millennia. These findings highlight the need to reintroduce or maintain herbivory as a management tool in fire‐prone Mediterranean ecosystems.

Our 8000‐year palaeoecological reconstruction from southern France reveals that herbivores and fire have jointly maintained open, heterogeneous, and biodiverse Mediterranean landscapes. Periods of high‐herbivore density consistently coincided with flammable, species‐rich habitats, while declines in grazing promoted closed forests with lower diversity. These results highlight herbivory as a key ecological driver and a potential management tool for sustaining biodiversity and reducing fire risk in Mediterranean ecosystems.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Fire (MESH:D000092422)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12634060/full.md

## References

73 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12634060/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12634060