How do plant communities differ between fire refugia and fire‐generated early‐seral vegetation?

Aims Wildfires in dry forest ecosystems in western North America are producing fire effects that are more severe than historical estimates, raising concerns about the resilience of these landscapes to contemporary disturbances. Despite increasing fire activity, relatively little is known about the s...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of vegetation science 2020-01, Vol.31 (1), p.26-39
Hauptverfasser: Downing, William M., Krawchuk, Meg A., Coop, Jonathan D., Meigs, Garrett W., Haire, Sandra L., Walker, Ryan B., Whitman, Ellen, Chong, Geneva, Miller, Carol, Tortorelli, Claire, Roxburgh, Stephen
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Aims Wildfires in dry forest ecosystems in western North America are producing fire effects that are more severe than historical estimates, raising concerns about the resilience of these landscapes to contemporary disturbances. Despite increasing fire activity, relatively little is known about the structure and composition of fire refugia — unburned or low‐severity burned patches where trees survived fire — or the degree to which their understory composition differs from fire‐generated early‐seral forests. Locations Four recent large fires in dry mixed‐conifer forest in eastern Oregon, USA. Methods We sampled vegetation and environmental factors in 187 plots (100‐m2) in fire refugia (n = 52) and stand‐replacement patches (SRPs) (n = 135). We used non‐metric multidimensional scaling, indicator species analysis, and randomization tests to compare understory plant communities and diversity in fire refugia and SRPs 12–17 years post‐fire. Results Understory plant communities in fire refugia and SRPs showed strong compositional affinities, but exhibited shifts in reproductive trait prevalence and differences in landscape‐scale species richness. There were no differences in plot‐scale species richness or the occurrence of two prominent invasive annual grasses (Bromus tectorum, Ventenata dubia). The abundance of common obligate seeding species was similar between plot types, but resprouting and seed‐banking species became substantially more abundant in SRPs. Significantly more plant species occurred only in fire refugia, and significantly fewer in SRPs, than expected by chance. Conclusions Similarities in understory plant communities between fire refugia and early‐seral forest in SRPs provide evidence for the resilience of historically frequent‐fire forest understory communities to contemporary fire effects. However, fire refugia may serve an ecologically important role as patches with relatively intact forest structure, seed sources that contribute to post‐fire forest recovery, and as reservoirs of species and age structure that may be absent from the higher‐severity burned matrix. Fire refugia — unburned or low‐severity burned patches where trees survived fire — are important landscape elements, but little is known about their composition in dry forest ecosystems. We compared post‐fire understory plant communities in fire refugia and stand‐replacement patches and found that communities showed strong compositional affinities, but exhibited shifts in reproductive
ISSN:1100-9233
1654-1103
DOI:10.1111/jvs.12814