Fire severity and changing composition of forest understory plant communities

被引:20
|
作者
Stevens, Jens T. [1 ]
Miller, Jesse E. D. [2 ]
Fornwalt, Paula J. [3 ]
机构
[1] US Geol Survey, New Mexico Landscapes Field Stn, Santa Fe, NM 87508 USA
[2] Stanford Univ, Dept Biol, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
[3] US Forest Serv, USDA, Rocky Mt Res Stn, Ft Collins, CO USA
关键词
biodiversity; biogeographic affinity; Colorado; dry conifer forests; fire; Hayman Fire; thermophilization; understory; PINE-DOMINATED FORESTS; STAND-REPLACING FIRE; CLIMATE-CHANGE; PONDEROSA; COLORADO; VEGETATION; CALIFORNIA; WILDFIRE; USA; MICROCLIMATE;
D O I
10.1111/jvs.12796
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
Questions Gradients of fire severity in dry conifer forests can be associated with variation in understory floristic composition. Recent work in dry conifer forests in California, USA, has suggested that more severely burned stands contain more thermophilic taxa (those associated with warmer and drier conditions), and that forest disturbance may therefore accelerate floristic shifts already underway due to climate change. However, it remains unknown how rapidly thermophilic taxa shifts occur following disturbance, how long such shifts are likely to persist, and how different thermophilic post-disturbance communities are from pre-disturbance communities. Location Colorado Front Range, USA. Methods We investigated these questions using a unique 15-year vegetation plot dataset that captures pre- and post-fire understory community composition across a gradient of fire severity in dry conifer forests, classifying taxa using the biogeographic affinity concept. Results Thermophilization (defined here as a decrease in the ratio of cool-mesic taxa to warm-xeric taxa, based on biogeographic affinity of paleobotanical lineages) was observed as early as one year post-fire for all fire severity classes, but was stronger at sites that burned at higher severity. The ratio of cool-mesic to warm-xeric taxa recovered to pre-fire levels within 10 years in stands that burned at low severity, but not in stands that burned at moderate or high severity. The process of thermophilization after high-severity fire appears to be driven primarily by the gain of warm-xeric taxa that were absent before the fire, but losses of cool-mesic taxa, which did not return during the duration of the study, also played a role. Conclusions Decreases in canopy cover appear to be a main contributor to understory thermophilization. Fine-scale heterogeneity in post-fire forest structure is likely an important driver of floristic diversity, creating the microclimatic variation necessary to maintain floristic refugia for species mal-adapted to increasingly warm and dry conditions.
引用
收藏
页码:1099 / 1109
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Influence of fire and harvest severity on understory plant communities
    Jean, Melanie
    Lafleur, Benoit
    Fenton, Nicole J.
    Pare, David
    Bergeron, Yves
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2019, 436 : 88 - 104
  • [2] Effect of Deer and Forest Edge on Understory Plant Communities
    Wagnerl, Alexa S.
    Petersen, Sheryl M.
    Camino-Kyker, Sarah
    Watson, Mike
    Burke, David J.
    Stuble, Katharine L.
    NATURAL AREAS JOURNAL, 2023, 43 (01) : 22 - 28
  • [3] Forest disturbance accelerates thermophilization of understory plant communities
    Stevens, Jens T.
    Safford, Hugh D.
    Harrison, Susan
    Latimer, Andrew M.
    JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, 2015, 103 (05) : 1253 - 1263
  • [4] Wildland fire effects on understory plant communities in two fire-prone forests
    Laughlin, Daniel C.
    Fule, Peter Z.
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH, 2008, 38 (01) : 133 - 142
  • [5] Peeking under the canopy: anomalously short fire-return intervals alter subalpine forest understory plant communities
    Kiel, Nathan G.
    Braziunas, Kristin H.
    Turner, Monica G.
    NEW PHYTOLOGIST, 2023, 239 (04) : 1225 - 1238
  • [6] Effects of roads on understory plant communities in a froadleaved forest in Hyrcanian zone
    Lotfalian, M.
    Riahifar, N.
    Fallah, A.
    Hodjati, S.M.
    Journal of Forest Science, 2012, 58 (10) : 446 - 455
  • [7] Fire, logging, and overstory affect understory abundance, diversity, and composition in boreal forest
    Hart, Stephen A.
    Chen, Han Y. H.
    ECOLOGICAL MONOGRAPHS, 2008, 78 (01) : 123 - 140
  • [8] Fire rather than nitrogen addition affects understory plant communities in the short term in a coniferous-broadleaf mixed forest
    Hu, Mengjun
    Liu, Yanchun
    Sun, Zhaolin
    Zhang, Kesheng
    Liu, Yinzhan
    Miao, Renhui
    Wan, Shiqiang
    ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2018, 8 (16): : 8135 - 8148
  • [9] Landownership is an unexplored determinant of forest understory plant composition in Northern France
    Berges, Laurent
    Avon, Catherine
    Verheyen, Kris
    Dupouey, Jean-Luc
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2013, 306 : 281 - 291
  • [10] Effects of past logging and grazing on understory plant communities in a montane Colorado forest
    Paula J. Fornwalt
    Merrill R. Kaufmann
    Laurie S. Huckaby
    Thomas J. Stohlgren
    Plant Ecology, 2009, 203 : 99 - 109