Fire (Sep 2020)

Using a Multi-Century Post-Fire Chronosequence to Develop Criteria to Distinguish Prior and Bowman’s (2020) Post-Fire Obligate Coloniser and Fire-Intolerant Flora

  • Carl R. Gosper,
  • Suzanne M. Prober

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/fire3030048
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 3
p. 48

Abstract

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Prior and Bowman added a new dimension to existing frameworks of post-fire responses of woody plants, by including the trait of colonisation ability (C) for those taxa which neither resprout (Rf−) nor produce seedlings (Sf−) after fire. Specifically, they recognised distinctions between: (i) post-fire obligate colonisers, being species that neither resprout nor produce seedlings from persistent seed banks post-fire but are able to colonise burnt areas through dispersal from unburnt populations, and (ii) fire-intolerant, which are unable to recover after fire by either resprouting, seeding or colonisation. We use data on temporal and spatial patterns of colonisation of Rf−Sf− mistletoes from a chronosequence study with an exceptionally long span of times since fire as a practical example of the delineation of post-fire obligate coloniser and fire-intolerant species. We propose that when a population of a species is burnt, if the species is unable to regularly colonise and reach reproductive maturity in burnt areas spatially distant from fire edges within plausible and regularly-occurring maximum fire-return intervals for the now-burnt community type, it would be classified as fire-intolerant. In our examples, Lysiana meets the criteria for fire-intolerant in obligate-seeder eucalypt woodland, while Amyema is classed as a post-fire obligate coloniser.

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