Fire Ecology | |
Fire frequency effects on plant community characteristics in the Great Basin and Mojave deserts of North America | |
Original Research | |
Kristina L. Cass1  Baylie C. Nusink1  Brianna M. Woodbury1  Tara B. B. Bishop1  Samuel B. St. Clair1  Rebekah L. Stanton1  David N. Armond1  | |
[1] Department of Plant and Wildlife Sciences, Brigham Young University, 4124 LSB, 84602, Provo, UT, USA; | |
关键词: Bromus; Cheatgrass; Invasion; Invasive grass fire cycle; Red brome; | |
DOI : 10.1186/s42408-023-00222-2 | |
received in 2022-10-06, accepted in 2023-09-27, 发布年份 2023 | |
来源: Springer | |
【 摘 要 】
BackgroundWildfire regimes are changing dramatically across North American deserts with the spread of invasive grasses. Invasive grass fire cycles in historically fire-resistant deserts are resulting in larger and more frequent wildfire. This study experimentally compared how single and repeat fires influence invasive grass-dominated plant fuels in the Great Basin, a semi-arid, cold desert, and the Mojave, a hyper-arid desert. Both study sites had identical study designs. In the summer of 2011, we experimentally burned half of each experimental block, the other half remaining as an unburned control. Half of the burned plots were reburned 5 years later to simulate increasing burn frequency. We estimated non-woody plant biomass, cover, and density in plots from 2017 to 2020.ResultsBiomass did not vary between sites, but there was higher plant cover and lower plant density at the Mojave site than at the Great Basin site. Plant biomass, density, and cover varied significantly across the years, with stronger annual fluctuations in the Great Basin. At both desert sites, fire increased plant density and biomass but had no effect on the cover. The effect of fire on plant cover varied significantly between years for both deserts but was greater in the Great Basin than in the Mojave site. Repeat fires did not amplify initial fire effects.ConclusionsThe results suggest that in general annual fluctuations in fine fuel production and fluctuations in response to fire were more apparent at the Great Basin site than at the Mojave site, with no immediate compounding effect of repeat fires at either site.
【 授权许可】
CC BY
© Association for Fire Ecology 2023
【 预 览 】
Files | Size | Format | View |
---|---|---|---|
RO202311109012173ZK.pdf | 1317KB | download | |
MediaObjects/12888_2023_5202_MOESM1_ESM.docx | 29KB | Other | download |
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