Impacts of a short-interval severe fire on forest structure and regeneration in a temperate Andean Araucaria-Nothofagus forest
Background Warmer climate conditions are altering fire regimes globally, eroding the capacity of forest ecosystems to resist and recover from natural disturbances like wildfire. Severe and rapidly repeated wildfires are promoting tree regeneration failure of obligate-seeders and/or fire-sensitive sp...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Fire Ecology 2024-12, Vol.20 (1), p.93, Article 93 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background
Warmer climate conditions are altering fire regimes globally, eroding the capacity of forest ecosystems to resist and recover from natural disturbances like wildfire. Severe and rapidly repeated wildfires are promoting tree regeneration failure of obligate-seeders and/or fire-sensitive species in temperate forests of the Southern Hemisphere. We collected post-fire field data to evaluate whether forest structure and tree regeneration responses varied between two Andean forest study areas dominated by the threatened Gondwanan conifer
Araucaria araucana
and
Nothofagus
species (southern beeches) — one area burned once, the other reburned after 13 years.
Results
Tree mortality was high across species after a single high severity and/or repeated wildfire, although some
A. araucana
trees were able to survive both events. Post-fire seedling regeneration of
A. araucana
and
Nothofagus
spp. was poor in areas affected by severe wildfires, and the latter was absent from reburned plots. A key driver of this regeneration failure was increasing distance to live seed source trees, which was negatively correlated with these species’ post-fire seedling abundances. In contrast, species with the capacity to regenerate via resprouting (
A. araucana, N. alpina, N. obliqua
) did so after a single high severity fire; however, only a single
Nothofagus
species (
N. alpina)
resprouted abundantly after a reburn.
Conclusions
Our findings suggest that high severity and short-interval fires can drastically change the structure of and limit post-fire tree regeneration in
Araucaria-Nothofagus
forests, promoting alternative post-fire forest ecosystem trajectories. Resprouting species of the
Nothofagus
genus, especially
N. alpina
, exhibit the greatest resilience to these emerging fire patterns. These forests are currently facing an unprecedented climatic shift toward greater fire activity, where resprouting is the favored regeneration strategy. If the occurrence of severe and short-interval fires increases in the coming decades, as predicted, we expect
Araucaria-Nothofagus
forests to shift toward a drier, more flammable shrubland ecosystem state. |
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ISSN: | 1933-9747 1933-9747 |
DOI: | 10.1186/s42408-024-00327-2 |