High fire frequency in California chaparral reduces postfire shrub regeneration and native plant diversity

IF 2.7 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q2 ECOLOGY
Ecosphere Pub Date : 2024-12-18 DOI:10.1002/ecs2.70128
Ashley R. Grupenhoff, Hugh D. Safford
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Abstract

Fire is crucial for maintaining species diversity and resilience in fire-adapted shrublands of the world's Mediterranean climate zones (MCZs), which include the chaparral shrublands of the North American MCZ. Chaparral is adapted to high-intensity burning, with relatively long intervals between fires (30–100 years) typifying undegraded conditions. Modern fire frequencies are much higher in chaparral, driven largely by high densities of human ignitions and coincidence between ignitions and severe weather conditions. This change in the fire regime has major implications for biodiversity, leading to exotic invasion, decreased ecosystem services, and potential type conversion of shrubland to grassland dominated by exotic species. We studied the impact of increased fire frequencies on the composition and abundance of herbaceous and woody species in the Interior Coast Range of northern California. Our study area is one of the most frequently burned areas in California, which allowed us to investigate higher fire frequencies than previously published in the scientific literature for California. We surveyed fifty-four 250-m2 plots to assess changes in plant community composition and postfire regeneration of chaparral shrubs across a wide range of fire frequencies, including plots that have burned up to six times in the past 30 years. Our findings reveal that short-interval fires significantly reduced postfire native woody regeneration, with obligate seeding species experiencing a 99% reduction and facultative species showing an 83% reduction in regeneration in the most frequently burned plots. Moreover, the overall marginal effect of one additional fire since 1985 decreased the proportion of native species cover by 12% and both richness and Shannon diversity by 4%. Consequently, areas with higher fire recurrence supported a more structurally and botanically homogeneous landscape dominated by a homogeneous group of non-native species.

Abstract Image

加州灌木林的高火灾频率减少了火灾后灌木的再生和本地植物的多样性
火对于维持世界地中海气候区(MCZ)适应火的灌丛地的物种多样性和恢复力至关重要,其中包括北美MCZ的灌木林。Chaparral适应高强度燃烧,火灾间隔相对较长(30-100年),代表未退化的条件。现代的火灾频率在灌木丛中要高得多,这主要是由于人类点火的高密度以及点火与恶劣天气条件的巧合。这种变化对生物多样性有重大影响,导致外来物种入侵,生态系统服务功能下降,并可能导致灌木林地向以外来物种为主的草地类型转变。我们研究了火灾频率增加对北加州内陆海岸山脉草本和木本物种组成和丰度的影响。我们的研究区域是加州最常被烧毁的地区之一,这使我们能够调查比以前在加州科学文献中发表的更高的火灾频率。我们调查了54个250平方米的样地,评估了在广泛的火灾频率范围内植物群落组成和灌木林火灾后更新的变化,包括在过去30年里燃烧了6次的样地。我们的研究结果表明,短间隔火灾显著降低了火灾后本地木材的再生,在最频繁燃烧的地块中,专性播种树种的再生减少了99%,同时性树种的再生减少了83%。此外,自1985年以来,每增加一次火的总体边际效应使本地物种覆盖比例减少12%,丰富度和香农多样性均减少4%。因此,火灾复发率较高的地区在结构和植物学上支持更均匀的景观,由同质的非本地物种群主导。
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来源期刊
Ecosphere
Ecosphere ECOLOGY-
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
3.70%
发文量
378
审稿时长
15 weeks
期刊介绍: The scope of Ecosphere is as broad as the science of ecology itself. The journal welcomes submissions from all sub-disciplines of ecological science, as well as interdisciplinary studies relating to ecology. The journal''s goal is to provide a rapid-publication, online-only, open-access alternative to ESA''s other journals, while maintaining the rigorous standards of peer review for which ESA publications are renowned.
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