Mortality and recruitment of fire-tolerant eucalypts as influenced by wildfire severity and recent prescribed fire
Authors
Bennett, Lauren T.; Bruce, Matthew J.; Machunter, Josephine; Kohout, Michele; Tanase, Mihai AndreiIdentifiers
Permanent link (URI): http://hdl.handle.net/10017/59691DOI: 10.1016/j.foreco.2016.08.047
Date
2016-11-15Academic Departments
Universidad de Alcalá. Departamento de Geología, Geografía y Medio Ambiente
Teaching unit
Unidad Docente Geografía
Funders
Australian Government
Bibliographic citation
Forest Ecology and Management, 2016, v. 380, n. , p. 107-117
Keywords
Fire severity
Prescribed burning
Regeneration
Resprouter
Temperate forest
Tree mortality
Project
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/AG/Biodiversity Fund/LSP-943972-876/AU//
Document type
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Version
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)
© Elsevier
Access rights
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Abstract
Mixed-species eucalypt forests of temperate Australia are assumed tolerant of most fire regimes based on the impressive capacity of the dominant eucalypts to resprout. However, empirical data to test this assumption are rare, limiting capacity to predict forest tolerance to emerging fire regimes including more frequent severe wildfires and extensive use of prescribed fire. We quantified tree mortality and regeneration in mixed-species eucalypt forests five years after an extensive wildfire that burnt under extreme fire weather. To examine combined site-level effects of wildfire and prescribed fire, our study included factorial replications of three wildfire severities, assessed as crown scorch and understorey consumption shortly after the wildfire (Unburnt, Low, High), and two times since last preceding fire (30 years since any fire). Our data indicate that while most trees survived low-severity wildfire through epicormic resprouting, this capacity was tested by high-severity wildfire. Five years after the wildfire, percentage mortalities of eucalypts in all size intervals from 10 to >70 cm diameter were significantly greater at High severity than Unburnt or Low severity sites, and included the near loss of the 10–20 cm cohort (93% mortality). Prolific seedling regeneration at High severity sites, and unreliable basal resprouting, indicated the importance of seedling recruitment to the resilience of these firetolerant forests. Recent prescribed fire had no clear effect on forest resistance (as tree survival) to wildfire, but decreased site-level resilience (as recruitment) by increasing mortalities of small stems. Our study indicates that high-severity wildfire has the potential to cause transitions to more open, simplified stand structures through increased tree mortality, including disproportionate losses in some size cohorts. Dependence on seedling recruitment could increase vulnerabilities to subsequent fires and future climates, potentially requiring direct management interventions to bolster forest resilience.
Files in this item
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| mortality_bennett_FEM_2016.pdf | 1.463Mb |
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| mortality_bennett_FEM_2016.pdf | 1.463Mb |
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