Toward reference conditions: wildfire effects on flora in an old-growth ponderosa pine forest

Remote ponderosa pine ( Pinus ponderosa) forests on the North Rim of Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona, USA provide valuable examples of reference conditions due to their relatively uninterrupted fire regimes, limited grazing history, and protection from logging. Wildfire is an important disturban...

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Published inForest ecology and management Vol. 199; no. 1; pp. 137 - 152
Main Authors Laughlin, Daniel C., Bakker, Jonathan D., Stoddard, Michael T., Daniels, Mark L., Springer, Judith D., Gildar, Cara N., Green, Aaron M., Covington, W.Wallace
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Amsterdam Elsevier B.V 27.09.2004
Elsevier
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Online AccessGet full text
ISSN0378-1127
1872-7042
DOI10.1016/j.foreco.2004.05.034

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Abstract Remote ponderosa pine ( Pinus ponderosa) forests on the North Rim of Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona, USA provide valuable examples of reference conditions due to their relatively uninterrupted fire regimes, limited grazing history, and protection from logging. Wildfire is an important disturbance agent in upland forests of the Interior West, yet repeated measurements taken before and after lightning-ignited fires are rare. In 1999, a low-severity Wildland Fire Use fire burned 156 ha on Fire Point, a peninsula dominated by old-growth ponderosa pines, which had not burned for at least 76 years. We measured understory plant community and forest floor characteristics in 1998 (1 year before the fire) and 2001 (2 years after the fire) at this site and at nearby reference sites that did not burn in 1999 but have had continuing fire regimes throughout the past century. After the wildfire, the plant community at Fire Point shifted toward higher compositional similarity with the reference sites. Analysis of functional group composition indicated that this change was due primarily to an increase in annual and biennial forbs. Gayophytum diffusum, Polygonum douglasii, Chenopodium spp., Solidago spp., Elymus elymoides, Calochortus nuttallii, Hesperostipa comata, and Lotus spp. were indicative of forests influenced by recent fires. Species richness, plant cover, plant layer density and plant diversity were significantly lower at Fire Point than at the reference sites, possibly due to long-term fire exclusion, but the fire did not increase the rate of change in these variables after 2 years. Few exotic species were present at any site. Forest floor depths at Fire Point were reduced to depths similar to the reference sites, primarily due to consumption of the duff layer. There was a significant inverse relationship between the ratio of duff:litter and species richness. Compared to fire-excluded forests, old-growth ponderosa pine forests influenced by low-intensity surface fires generally have greater plant species richness (especially annual forbs) and lighter fuel loads. This study supports the continued application of the Wildland Fire Use strategy in old-growth montane forests to maintain and improve forest health by altering understory species composition and reducing fuel loads.
AbstractList An old-growth ponderosa pine Pinus ponderosa forest that had experienced long-term fire exclusion was compared with a broad range of reference sites that had experienced a relatively undisrupted fire regime throughout the past century. The forests were on the North Rim of Grand Canyon National Park, and the forests were compared in terms of understory vegetation and forest-floor characteristics. Understory vegetation and forest substrates were sampled using belt and point intercept transects, and complete species lists were collected in two belt transects per plot. Non-metric multi-dimensional scaling was used to illustrate differences in community composition among sites and years. Wildfire appeared to have directed the community composition of Fire Point, which was the subject of a low-severity fire, on a trajectory toward higher similarity with that of the reference plots. Species richness was significantly higher at the reference sites than at Fire Point, although the rate of change in species richness did not differ between sites. Reference plots also had significantly higher plant cover and plant layer density than Fire Point plots.
Remote ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa) forests on the North Rim of Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona, USA provide valuable examples of reference conditions due to their relatively uninterrupted fire regimes, limited grazing history, and protection from logging. Wildfire is an important disturbance agent in upland forests of the Interior West, yet repeated measurements taken before and after lightning-ignited fires are rare. In 1999, a low-severity Wildland Fire Use fire burned 156ha on Fire Point, a peninsula dominated by old-growth ponderosa pines, which had not burned for at least 76 years. We measured understory plant community and forest floor characteristics in 1998 (1 year before the fire) and 2001 (2 years after the fire) at this site and at nearby reference sites that did not burn in 1999 but have had continuing fire regimes throughout the past century. After the wildfire, the plant community at Fire Point shifted toward higher compositional similarity with the reference sites. Analysis of functional group composition indicated that this change was due primarily to an increase in annual and biennial forbs. Gayophytum diffusum, Polygonum douglasii, Chenopodium spp., Solidago spp., Elymus elymoides, Calochortus nuttallii, Hesperostipa comata, and Lotus spp. were indicative of forests influenced by recent fires. Species richness, plant cover, plant layer density and plant diversity were significantly lower at Fire Point than at the reference sites, possibly due to long-term fire exclusion, but the fire did not increase the rate of change in these variables after 2 years. Few exotic species were present at any site. Forest floor depths at Fire Point were reduced to depths similar to the reference sites, primarily due to consumption of the duff layer. There was a significant inverse relationship between the ratio of duff:litter and species richness. Compared to fire-excluded forests, old-growth ponderosa pine forests influenced by low-intensity surface fires generally have greater plant species richness (especially annual forbs) and lighter fuel loads. This study supports the continued application of the Wildland Fire Use strategy in old-growth montane forests to maintain and improve forest health by altering understory species composition and reducing fuel loads.
Remote ponderosa pine ( Pinus ponderosa) forests on the North Rim of Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona, USA provide valuable examples of reference conditions due to their relatively uninterrupted fire regimes, limited grazing history, and protection from logging. Wildfire is an important disturbance agent in upland forests of the Interior West, yet repeated measurements taken before and after lightning-ignited fires are rare. In 1999, a low-severity Wildland Fire Use fire burned 156 ha on Fire Point, a peninsula dominated by old-growth ponderosa pines, which had not burned for at least 76 years. We measured understory plant community and forest floor characteristics in 1998 (1 year before the fire) and 2001 (2 years after the fire) at this site and at nearby reference sites that did not burn in 1999 but have had continuing fire regimes throughout the past century. After the wildfire, the plant community at Fire Point shifted toward higher compositional similarity with the reference sites. Analysis of functional group composition indicated that this change was due primarily to an increase in annual and biennial forbs. Gayophytum diffusum, Polygonum douglasii, Chenopodium spp., Solidago spp., Elymus elymoides, Calochortus nuttallii, Hesperostipa comata, and Lotus spp. were indicative of forests influenced by recent fires. Species richness, plant cover, plant layer density and plant diversity were significantly lower at Fire Point than at the reference sites, possibly due to long-term fire exclusion, but the fire did not increase the rate of change in these variables after 2 years. Few exotic species were present at any site. Forest floor depths at Fire Point were reduced to depths similar to the reference sites, primarily due to consumption of the duff layer. There was a significant inverse relationship between the ratio of duff:litter and species richness. Compared to fire-excluded forests, old-growth ponderosa pine forests influenced by low-intensity surface fires generally have greater plant species richness (especially annual forbs) and lighter fuel loads. This study supports the continued application of the Wildland Fire Use strategy in old-growth montane forests to maintain and improve forest health by altering understory species composition and reducing fuel loads.
Author Laughlin, Daniel C.
Gildar, Cara N.
Bakker, Jonathan D.
Stoddard, Michael T.
Daniels, Mark L.
Springer, Judith D.
Green, Aaron M.
Covington, W.Wallace
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Issue 1
Keywords Fire history
Understory vegetation
BACI design
Grand Canyon
Annuals
Wildland Fire Use
Ponderosa pine
Reference conditions
Growth
National park
Pinus ponderosa
Understory
Dicotyledones
Angiospermae
Gymnospermae
Species richness
Litter
Polygonaceae
Plant community
Increase
Forest logging
Perturbation
Lotus
Grazing
Chenopodiaceae
Chenopodium
Polygonum
Leguminosae
Flora
Fire
Coniferales
Spermatophyta
Herbaceous plant
Language English
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  article-title: Fire intensity effects on the understory in ponderosa pine forests
  publication-title: J. Range Manage
  doi: 10.2307/3898822
– ident: 10.1016/j.foreco.2004.05.034_BIB51
– ident: 10.1016/j.foreco.2004.05.034_BIB76
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Snippet Remote ponderosa pine ( Pinus ponderosa) forests on the North Rim of Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona, USA provide valuable examples of reference conditions...
An old-growth ponderosa pine Pinus ponderosa forest that had experienced long-term fire exclusion was compared with a broad range of reference sites that had...
Remote ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa) forests on the North Rim of Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona, USA provide valuable examples of reference conditions...
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StartPage 137
SubjectTerms Animal and plant ecology
Animal, plant and microbial ecology
Annuals
BACI design
Biological and medical sciences
Calochortus nuttallii
Chenopodium
Elymus elymoides
Fire history
Forest harvesting and working in forest
Forestry
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Gayophytum diffusum
Grand Canyon
Lotus
Pinus ponderosa
Polygonum douglasii
Ponderosa pine
Reference conditions
Solidago
Synecology
Terrestrial ecosystems
Understory vegetation
Wildland Fire Use
Title Toward reference conditions: wildfire effects on flora in an old-growth ponderosa pine forest
URI https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2004.05.034
https://www.proquest.com/docview/14707411
https://www.proquest.com/docview/17766851
https://www.proquest.com/docview/49203817
Volume 199
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