HISTORIC FIRE REGIME OF AN UPLAND OAK FOREST IN SOUTH-CENTRAL NORTH AMERICA

被引:34
|
作者
DeSantis, Ryan D. [1 ]
Hallgren, Stephen W. [2 ]
Stahle, David W. [3 ]
机构
[1] US Forest Serv, USDA, No Res Stn, St Paul, MN 55108 USA
[2] Oklahoma State Univ, Dept Nat Resource Ecol & Management, Stillwater, OK 74078 USA
[3] Univ Arkansas, Dept Geosci, Fayetteville, AR 72701 USA
来源
FIRE ECOLOGY | 2010年 / 6卷 / 03期
关键词
anthropogenic ignition; Cross Timbers; dendrochronology; fire history; oak forest; Oklahoma; post oak; prescribed burning; Quercus stellata Wangenh; STAND STRUCTURE; CROSS TIMBERS; POST-OAK; GRASSLAND; FREQUENCY; SCAR; GROWTH;
D O I
10.4996/fireecology.0603045
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Prescribed burning is used in upland oak forests of south-central North America to improve wildlife habitat, reduce fire hazard, restore ecosystem integrity, and maintain biological diversity. However, little is known about the frequency, seasonality, and ignition source of historic fires that shaped these forests. In general, it is believed that fire frequency in upland oak forests of south-central North America was influenced by climate and humans, and decreased since Euro-American settlement; yet there is a dearth of scientific evidence to support this conclusion. The objective of this study was to link the fire history of an upland oak forest in east-central Oklahoma with factors controlling the fire regime. We removed cross-sections from 69 dead post oak (Quercus stellata Wangenh.) trees in a 1 km(2) area of old-growth post oak and blackjack oak (Q. marilandica Munchh.) forest, and determined the tree-ring record and exact dates of fire scars from 1750 to 2005, using standard dendrochronological methods. An increase in fire from the eighteenth to early twenty-first centuries appeared to be associated with changes in human occupation, and there was little evidence linking the frequency, severity, or extent of fires to climate factors including drought, lightning, and late-spring frosts. These findings appeared to contradict the belief that fire decreased from the eighteenth to early twenty-first centuries and appeared to emphasize the importance of anthropogenic ignition to the local fire regime.
引用
收藏
页码:45 / 61
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] BRYOCHENEA-SACHALINENSIS (THUIDIACEAE) NEW TO NORTH-AMERICA IN SOUTH-CENTRAL ALASKA
    OBRIEN, TJ
    [J]. BRYOLOGIST, 1993, 96 (02): : 205 - 209
  • [22] San patrice: An example of Late Paleoindian adaptive versatility in South-Central North America
    Jennings, Thomas A.
    [J]. AMERICAN ANTIQUITY, 2008, 73 (03) : 539 - 559
  • [23] Climate variability and forest fires in central and south-central Chile
    Urrutia-Jalabert, Rocio
    Gonzalez, Mauro E.
    Gonzalez-Reyes, Alvaro
    Lara, Antonio
    Garreaud, Rene
    [J]. ECOSPHERE, 2018, 9 (04):
  • [24] Mercury in mushrooms and soil from the Wielunska Upland in south-central Poland
    Falandysz, J
    Bielawski, L
    Kawano, M
    Brzostowski, A
    Chudzynski, K
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND HEALTH PART A-TOXIC/HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCES & ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING, 2002, 37 (08): : 1409 - 1420
  • [25] Little ice age evidence from a south-central North America ice core, USA
    Naftz, DL
    Klusman, RW
    Michel, RL
    Schuster, PF
    Reddy, MM
    Taylor, HE
    Yanosky, TM
    McConnaughey, EA
    [J]. ARCTIC AND ALPINE RESEARCH, 1996, 28 (01) : 35 - 41
  • [26] Identifying areas of wetland and wind turbine overlap in the south-central Great Plains of North America
    L. J. Heintzman
    E. S. Auerbach
    D. H. Kilborn
    S. M. Starr
    K. R. Mulligan
    L. S. Barbato
    N. E. McIntyre
    [J]. Landscape Ecology, 2020, 35 : 1995 - 2011
  • [27] Identifying areas of wetland and wind turbine overlap in the south-central Great Plains of North America
    Heintzman, L. J.
    Auerbach, E. S.
    Kilborn, D. H.
    Starr, S. M.
    Mulligan, K. R.
    Barbato, L. S.
    McIntyre, N. E.
    [J]. LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY, 2020, 35 (09) : 1995 - 2011
  • [28] BIOLOGICAL RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN FORAGERS AND FARMERS OF SOUTH-CENTRAL NORTH AMERICA: NONMETRIC DENTAL TRAITS
    Taylor, Matthew
    Creel, Darrell
    [J]. AMERICAN ANTIQUITY, 2012, 77 (01) : 99 - 114
  • [29] Early post-fire succession in a Nothofagus glauca forest in the Coastal Cordillera of south-central Chile
    Litton, CM
    Santelices, R
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WILDLAND FIRE, 2002, 11 (02) : 115 - 125
  • [30] SURVIVAL RATES OF FOREST PASSERINES IN SOUTH-CENTRAL CHILE
    Thomson, Roberto F.
    Estades, Cristian F.
    [J]. ORNITOLOGIA NEOTROPICAL, 2012, 23 (01): : 1 - 9