Fire-driven alien invasion in a fire-adapted ecosystem

被引:120
|
作者
Keeley, Jon E. [1 ,2 ]
Brennan, Teresa J. [1 ]
机构
[1] US Geol Survey, Western Ecol Res Ctr, Sequoia Kings Canyon Field Stn, Three Rivers, CA 93271 USA
[2] Univ Calif Los Angeles, Dept Ecol & Evolutionary Biol, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA
关键词
Alien plants; Crown fires; Fire feedbacks; Fire regimes; Type conversion; COASTAL SAGE SCRUB; SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA; NORTH-AMERICA; WILDFIRES; BROMUS; RESTORATION; PERSISTENCE; SHRUBLANDS; VEGETATION; DIVERSITY;
D O I
10.1007/s00442-012-2253-8
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Disturbance plays a key role in many alien plant invasions. However, often the main driver of invasion is not disturbance per se but alterations in the disturbance regime. In some fire-adapted shrublands, the community is highly resilient to infrequent, high-intensity fires, but changes in the fire regime that result in shorter fire intervals may make these communities more susceptible to alien plant invasions. This study examines several wildfire events that resulted in short fire intervals in California chaparral shrublands. In one study, we compared postfire recovery patterns in sites with different prefire stand ages (3 and 24 years), and in another study we compared sites that had burned once in four years with sites that had burned twice in this period. The population size of the dominant native shrub Adenostoma fasciculatum was drastically reduced following fire in the 3-year sites relative to the 24-year sites. The 3-year sites had much greater alien plant cover and significantly lower plant diversity than the 24-year sites. In a separate study, repeat fires four years apart on the same sites showed that annual species increased significantly after the second fire, and alien annuals far outnumbered native annuals. Aliens included both annual grasses and annual forbs and were negatively correlated with woody plant cover. Native woody species regenerated well after the first fire but declined after the second fire, and one obligate seeding shrub was extirpated from two sites by the repeat fires. It is concluded that some fire-adapted shrublands are vulnerable to changes in fire regime, and this can lead to a loss of native diversity and put the community on a trajectory towards type conversion from a woody to an herbaceous system. Such changes result in alterations in the proportion of natives to non-natives, changes in functional types from deeply rooted shrubs to shallow rooted grasses and forbs, increased fire frequency due to the increase in fine fuels, and changes in carbon storage.
引用
收藏
页码:1043 / 1052
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Fire-driven alien invasion in a fire-adapted ecosystem
    Jon E. Keeley
    Teresa J. Brennan
    Oecologia, 2012, 169 : 1043 - 1052
  • [2] Fire-adapted traits in animals
    Jones, Gavin M.
    Goldberg, Joshua F.
    Wilcox, Taylor M.
    Buckley, Lauren B.
    Parr, Catherine L.
    Linck, Ethan B.
    Fountain, Emily D.
    Schwartz, Michael K.
    TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION, 2023, 38 (12) : 1117 - 1118
  • [3] A charter for fire-adapted settlements
    March, Alan
    Gonzalez-Mathiesen, Constanza
    Richter, Francisca Yunis
    AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT, 2024, 39 (02): : 46 - 50
  • [4] Rethinking fire-adapted species in an altered fire regime
    Tubbesing, Carmen L.
    York, Robert A.
    Stephens, Scott L.
    Battles, John J.
    ECOSPHERE, 2020, 11 (03):
  • [5] Fire-Proneness as a Prerequisite for the Evolution of Fire-Adapted Traits
    Lamont, Byron B.
    He, Tianhua
    TRENDS IN PLANT SCIENCE, 2017, 22 (04) : 278 - 288
  • [6] FIRE-DRIVEN FLOWS IN ENCLOSURES
    MCGRATTAN, KB
    REHM, RG
    BAUM, HR
    JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL PHYSICS, 1994, 110 (02) : 285 - 291
  • [7] Delayed positive responses of snowshoe hares to prescribed burning in a fire-adapted ecosystem
    Gigliotti, L. C.
    Boyd, E. S.
    Diefenbach, D. R.
    ANIMAL CONSERVATION, 2024, 27 (06) : 767 - 775
  • [8] Snowshoe hare multi-level habitat use in a fire-adapted ecosystem
    Gigliotti, Laura C.
    Jones, Benjamin C.
    Lovallo, Matthew J.
    Diefenbach, Duane R.
    JOURNAL OF WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT, 2018, 82 (02): : 435 - 444
  • [9] Reducing crown fire hazard in fire-adapted forests of New Mexico
    Fiedler, CE
    Keegan, CE
    FIRE, FUEL TREATMENTS, AND ECOLOGICAL RESTORATION: CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS, 2002, (29): : 39 - 48
  • [10] Quail on fire: changing fire regimes may benefit mountain quail in fire-adapted forests
    Kristin M. Brunk
    R. J. Gutiérrez
    M. Zachariah Peery
    C. Alina Cansler
    Stefan Kahl
    Connor M. Wood
    Fire Ecology, 19