Abstract Fire exclusion and mismanaged grazing are globally important drivers of environmental change in mesic C4grasslands and savannas. Although interest is growing in prescribed fire for grassland restoration, we have little long‐term experimental evidence of the influence of burn season on the recovery of herbaceous plant communities, encroachment by trees and shrubs, and invasion by exotic grasses. We conducted a prescribed fire experiment (seven burns between 2001 and 2019) in historically fire‐excluded and overgrazed grasslands of central Texas. Sites were assigned to one of four experimental treatments: summer burns (warm season, lightning season), fall burns (early cool season), winter burns (late cool season), or unburned (fire exclusion). To assess restoration outcomes of the experiment, in 2019, we identified old‐growth grasslands to serve as reference sites. Herbaceous‐layer plant communities in all experimental sites were compositionally and functionally distinct from old‐growth grasslands, with little recovery of perennial C4grasses and long‐lived forbs. Unburned sites were characterized by several species of tree, shrub, and vine; summer sites were characterized by certain C3grasses and forbs; and fall and winter sites were intermediate in composition to the unburned and summer sites. Despite compositional differences, all treatments had comparable plot‐level plant species richness (range 89–95 species/1000 m2). At the local‐scale, summer sites (23 species/m2) and old‐growth grasslands (20 species/m2) supported greater richness than unburned sites (15 species/m2), but did not differ significantly from fall or winter sites. Among fire treatments, summer and winter burns most consistently produced the vegetation structure of old‐growth grasslands (e.g., mean woody canopy cover of 9%). But whereas winter burns promoted the invasive grassBothriochloa ischaemumby maintaining areas with low canopy cover, summer burns simultaneously limited woody encroachment and controlledB. ischaemuminvasion. Our results support a growing body of literature that shows that prescribed fire alone, without the introduction of plant propagules, cannot necessarily restore old‐growth grassland community composition. Nonetheless, this long‐term experiment demonstrates that prescribed burns implemented in the summer can benefit restoration by preventing woody encroachment while also controlling an invasive grass. We suggest that fire season deserves greater attention in grassland restoration planning and ecological research.
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Experimental warming has limited impacts on post‐fire succession across a burn severity gradient
Abstract QuestionsAnthropogenic climate change is causing increases in the severity of wildland fire in many parts of the world. At the same time, post‐fire succession is occurring under new, warmer temperatures that are projected to continue increasing. Despite this, the combined effects of uncharacteristically high burn severity and increased ambient temperature on post‐fire community composition remain poorly understood. We ask how post‐fire forest understorey community composition and species richness are influenced by (1) burn severity, (2) experimental warming, and (3) years since fire. LocationMuseum Fire Scar,Pinus ponderosaforest, Arizona, United States. MethodsWe established 120 1‐m2quadrats in unburned, low‐ and high‐severity locations nine months after a mixed‐severity fire. Half of the plots were subject to experimental warming via open‐top warming chambers that elevated daytime temperatures by 1.079°C, simulating near‐term anthropogenic warming. Plant composition data were collected annually for three years. Relationships between community composition, burn severity, and experimental warming were analyzed using repeated‐measures PERMANOVA and linear mixed‐effects models. ResultsComposition differed significantly according to burn severity, time since fire, and their interaction, while experimental warming did not significantly influence composition. Species richness significantly increased in burned areas compared to unburned control within two years of fire. ConclusionsOur results suggest that near‐term temperature increases, driven by anthropogenic climate change, will have little effect on community composition relative to fire severity. High‐severity fire drove large, rapid changes in plant composition compared to unburned controls, favoring exotic annuals in a historically perennial‐dominated plant community.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2230356
- PAR ID:
- 10495272
- Publisher / Repository:
- Wiley-Blackwell
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Journal of Vegetation Science
- Volume:
- 35
- Issue:
- 2
- ISSN:
- 1100-9233
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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