Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://repositorio.ufla.br/jspui/handle/1/54419
Title: Histórico de incêndios em campos rupestres disjuntos: um estudo de caso em Carrancas, Minas Gerais
Other Titles: Fire history in disjunct campos rupestres: A case study in Carrancas, Minas Gerais
Historia de incendios en campos rupestres disjuntos: un estudio de caso en Carrancas, Minas Gerais
Keywords: Ecologia do fogo
Mapeamento comunitário
Incêndios - Impacto
Fogo - Manejo integrado
Fire ecology
Community mapping
Fire impacts
Integrated fire management
Ecologia del fuego
Fuego - Manejo integrado
Issue Date: Apr-2022
Publisher: Instituto Chico Mendes de Conservação da Biodiversidade (ICMBio)
Citation: RODRIGUES, C. C. et al. Histórico de incêndios em campos rupestres disjuntos: um estudo de caso em Carrancas, Minas Gerais. Biodiversidade Brasileira, Brasília, DF, v. 12, n. 2, p. 1-16, 2022. DOI: 10.37002/biobrasil.v12i2.1866.
Abstract: Recurring fires represent the worst fire scenario to natural ecosystems because they result from changes in the environment’s sustainable fire regimes. Data on current regimes could drive better fire management strategies, but they are barely available for campos rupestres (rupestrian grasslands), particularly those that are legally unprotected. Here, we aimed to describe and analyse uncontrolled fire regimes in campo rupestre remnants using a case study in the municipality of Carrancas, southern Minas Gerais. We identified the fire records and mapped fire-prone areas according to local social actors. The data were collected through a survey of secondary sources and participatory community mapping with a focal group. We synthesised the collected information in a historical matrix and generated a map of fire-prone areas. 43 fire records were identified between 2010 and 2019. Native grasslands, followed by permanent preservation areas, were the most affected by the fires. Our findings reinforce that inadequate fire regimes have been recurrent in disjunct campos rupestres, mainly due to the increase in fire occurrences in the late dry season. They also reveal the susceptibility of mountain areas under these conditions and the risks to biodiversity and ecosystem services. It is urgent to ensure sustainable fire regimes, acknowledging the ecological and sociocultural roles of fire and to introduce traditional fire management as a conservationist practice.
URI: https://revistaeletronica.icmbio.gov.br/BioBR/article/view/1866
http://repositorio.ufla.br/jspui/handle/1/54419
Appears in Collections:DCF - Artigos publicados em periódicos

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