Xinyu Li, Sarah Kimball, Priscilla Ta, Katharina T. Schmidt, Diane R. Campbell
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Aims
Post-fire vegetation recovery is often determined by the similarity of post-burn with unburned sites because of a lack of in situ information on pre-fire communities. The inclusion of pre-fire data can help account for pre-existing differences and explore recovery also in terms of return to pre-fire conditions. We used long-term monitoring data in coastal sage scrub and grasslands to: (a) examine vegetation cover recovery of different functional groups; and (b) determine whether vegetation composition in burned areas has recovered in 4 years after fire with burned to unburned and pre- to post-fire comparisons.
Location
Orange County, California, USA.
Methods
We analyzed long-term vegetation monitoring (2007–2021) data from 39 grassland and 58 coastal sage scrub transects in southern California, including observations before and after the 2017 Canyon 2 fire. Linear mixed-effect models were used to determine whether forb, grass, and shrub covers differed between burned and unburned sites while considering the effects of year and repeated monitoring. We used canonical analysis of principal coordinates to analyze vegetation composition based on burn status and time of sampling.
Results
Whereas vegetation cover in grassland recovered quickly, native vegetation cover in burned coastal sage scrub remained lowered 4 years after fire, though forb and non-native grass cover were higher in some post-fire years. Community composition in burned coastal sage scrub was still in recovery 4 years after fire when compared with unburned or pre-fire composition. Although burned and unburned grassland differed after fire in dominant grass species, inclusion of pre-fire data showed that this was a pre-existing difference.
Conclusions
Coastal sage scrub had not recovered pre-fire vegetation cover and composition by 4 years after fire, whereas grassland cover rebounded quickly, albeit with shifts in composition over time; patterns that were detected only by having pre- and post-fire data from long-term monitoring efforts.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Vegetation Science publishes papers on all aspects of plant community ecology, with particular emphasis on papers that develop new concepts or methods, test theory, identify general patterns, or that are otherwise likely to interest a broad international readership. Papers may focus on any aspect of vegetation science, e.g. community structure (including community assembly and plant functional types), biodiversity (including species richness and composition), spatial patterns (including plant geography and landscape ecology), temporal changes (including demography, community dynamics and palaeoecology) and processes (including ecophysiology), provided the focus is on increasing our understanding of plant communities. The Journal publishes papers on the ecology of a single species only if it plays a key role in structuring plant communities. Papers that apply ecological concepts, theories and methods to the vegetation management, conservation and restoration, and papers on vegetation survey should be directed to our associate journal, Applied Vegetation Science journal.