Long-Term Effects of High Intensity Prescribed Fire on Vegetation Dynamics in the Wine Spring Creek Watershed, Western North Carolina, USA

Springer Science and Business Media LLC - Tập 5 - Trang 66-85 - 2009
Katherine J. Elliott1, James M. Vose1, Ronald L. Hendrick2
1Coweeta Hydrologic Laboratory, Southern Research Station, USDA Forest Service, Otto, USA
2Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources, University of Georgia, Athens, USA

Tóm tắt

We examined the long-term effects of a prescribed fire in a southern Appalachian watershed in Nantahala National Forest, western North Carolina, USA. Fire was prescribed in 1995 on this site by forest managers to restore a degraded pine (Pinus spp.)-hardwood community, specifically to stimulate forage production, promote pine and oak (Quercus spp.) regeneration, and increase plant diversity. Before and after the prescribed fire, permanent plots were sampled across a south-facing hillslope, which corresponded to three community types: mesic, near-stream cove (riparian); dry, mixed-oak (mid-slope); and xeric, pine-hardwood (ridge). In an earlier paper, we reported the first two years of post-burn vegetation response from this prescribed burn. In our current study, we compared the pre-burn (1994) forest condition with 10 years post-burn (2005) vegetation measurements to determine the effects of fire on the mortality and regeneration of overstory trees, understory shrubs, and herbaceous-layer species. Overstory mortality was high immediately after the burn at the ridge location and ten years after the fire. Mortality of pitch pine (Pinus rigida Miller) (91.8 %) and hickory (Carya spp.) (77.5 %) reduced overstory basal area from 26.97 m2 ha−1 pre-burn to 18.86 m2 ha−1 post-burn in 1995 and to 9.13 m2 ha−1 in 2005. At the mid-slope and riparian locations, no significant overstory mortality occurred over time. Understory density was significantly higher 10 years after the burn (2005) than pre-burn, and basal area had returned to pre-burn levels. Density of mountain laurel (Kalmia latifolia L.), black huckleberry (Gaylussacia baccata [Wang.] K. Koch), and blueberry (Vaccinium spp.) had increased due to prolific sprouting. The prescribed fire had varying effects on diversity across the hillslope gradient over time. On the ridge, overstory diversity declined following the fire (H’basal area = 1.14 in 1994, H’basal area = 0.75 in 1995, and H’basal area = 0.80 in 2005). Diversity significantly increased in the herbaceous layer and remained higher than pre-burn conditions through 2005 (H’cover = 1.02 in 1994, H’cover = 1.97 in 1995, and H’cover = 2.25 in 2005). For the mid-slope and riparian positions, no change in diversity was observed in the overstory, understory or herbaceous layer.

Tài liệu tham khảo

Abrahamson, W.G. 1984. Post-fire recovery of Florida Lake Wales Ridge vegetation. American Journal of Botany 71: 9–21. Abrams, M.D. 2005. Prescribing fire in eastern oak forests: is time running out? Northern Journal of Applied Forestry 22: 190–196. Abrams, M.D., and G.J. Nowacki. 1992. Historical variation in fire, oak recruitment, and post-logging accelerated succession in central Pennsylvania. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 119: 19–28. Albrecht, M.A., and B.C. McCarthy. 2006. Effects of prescribed fire and thinning on tree recruitment patterns in central hardwood forests. Forest Ecology and Management 226: 88–103. Andre, J., M. Morales, and M. Anderson. 2007. Restoring the interior Ozark Highlands. Fire Management Today 67: 20–23. Arthur, M.A., R.D. Paratley, and B.A. Blankenship. 1998. Single and repeated fires affect survival and regeneration of woody and herbaceous species in an oak-pine forest. Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society 125: 225–236. Barden, L.S., and F.W. Woods. 1976. Effects of fire on pine and pine-hardwood forests in the southern Appalachians. Forest Science 22: 399–403. Barden, L.S. 2000. Population maintenance of Pinus pungens Lam. (Table Mountain pine) after a century without fire. Natural Areas Journal 20: 227–233. Blankenship, B.A., and M.A. Arthur. 2006. Stand structure over 9 years in burned and fire-excluded oak stands on the Cumberland Plateau, Kentucky. Forest Ecology and Management 225: 134–145. Boerner, R.E.J., T.A. Waldrop, and V.B. Shelburne. 2006. Wildfire mitigation strategies affect soil enzyme activity and soil organic carbon in loblolly pine (Pinus taeda) forests. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 26: 3148–3154. Brose, P.H., T. Schuler, D. Van Lear, and J. Berst. 2001. Bringing fire back, the changing regimes of the Appalachian mixed-oak forests. Journal of Forestry 99: 30–35. Brose, P.H., and T.A. Waldrop. 2006. Fire and the origin of Table Mountain pine-pitch pine communities in the southern Appalachian Mountains, USA. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 36: 710–718. Buckner, E.R. 1989. Evolution of forest types in the southeast. Pages 27–33 in: T.A. Waldrop, editor. Proceedings of pine-hardwood mixtures: a symposium on management and ecology of the type. USDA Forest Service General Technical Report SE-58, Asheville, North Carolina, USA. Certini, G. 2005. Effects of fire on properties of forest soils: a review. Oecologia 143: 1–10. Christensen, N.L. 1977. Changes in structure, pattern and diversity associated with climax forest maturation in Piedmont, North Carolina. American Midland Naturalist 97: 176–188. Clark, J.S., and J. Robinson. 1993. Paleoecology of fire. Pages 193–214 in: P.J. Crutzen and J.G. Goldammer, editors. Fire in the environment: the ecological, atmospheric, and climatic importance of vegetation fires. John Wiley and Sons, New York, New York, USA. Clendenin, M., and W. G. Ross. 2001. Effects of cool season prescribed fire on understory vegetation in a mixed pine hardwood forest of east Texas. Texas Journal of Science 53: 65–78. Clinton, B.D., J.M. Vose, and W.T. Swank. 1993. Site preparation burning to improve southern Appalachian pine-hardwood stands: vegetation composition and diversity of 13-year-old stands. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 23: 2271–2277. Clinton, B.D., and J.M. Vose. 2000. Plant succession and community restoration following felling and burning in the southern Appalachians. Proceedings of the Tall Timbers Fire Ecology Conference 21: 22–29. Crow, T.T. 1988. Reproductive mode and mechanisms for self-replacement of northern red oak (Quercus rubra)—a review. Forest Science 34: 19–40. DeVivo, M.S. 1991. Indian use of fire and land clearance in the southern Appalachians. Pages 306–312 in: S.C. Nodvin and T.A. Waldrop, editors. Fire and the Environment: Ecological and Cultural Perspectives. USDA Forest Service General Technical Report SE-69, Asheville, North Carolina, USA. Dey, D.C., and G. Hartman. 2005. Returning fire to Ozark Highland forest ecosystems: effects on advance regeneration. Forest Ecology and Management 217: 37–53. Dolan, B.J., and G.R. Parker. 2004. Understory response to disturbance: an investigation of prescribed burning and understory removal treatments. Pages 285–291 in: M.A. Spetich, editor. Upland oak ecology symposium: history, current conditions, and sustainability. USDA Forest Service General Technical Report SRS-73, Asheville, North Carolina, USA. Ducey, M.J., W.K. Moser, and P.M.S. Ashton. 1996. Effect of fire intensity on understory composition and diversity in a Kalmia-dominated oak forest, New England, USA. Vegetation 123: 81–90. Dumas, S., H.S. Neufeld, and M.C. Fisk. 2007. Fire in a thermic oak-pine forest in Linville Gorge Wilderness Area, North Carolina: importance of the shrub layer to ecosystem response. Castanea 72: 92–104. Elliott, K.J., R.L. Hendrick, A.E. Major, J.M. Vose, and W.T. Swank. 1999a. Vegetation dynamics after a prescribed fire in the southern Appalachians. Forest Ecology and Management 114: 199–213. Elliott, K.J., J.M. Vose, W.T. Swank, and P.V. Bolstad. 1999b. Long-term patterns in vegetation-site relationships in a Southern Appalachian forest. Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society 126: 320–334. Elliott, K.J., and J.M. Vose. 2005. Effects of understory prescribed burning on shortleaf pine (Pinus enchinata Mill.)/mixed hardwood forests. Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society 132: 236–251. Elliott, K.J., and W.T. Swank. 2008. Long-term changes in forest composition and diversity following early logging (1919–1923) and the decline of American chestnut (Castanea dentata (Marshall) Borkh). Plant Ecology 197: 155–172. Fei, S., and K.C. Steiner. 2007. Evidence for increasing red maple abundance in the eastern United States. Forest Science 53: 473–477. Franklin, S.B., P.A. Robertson, and J.S. Fralish. 2003. Prescribed burning effects on upland Quercus forest structure and function. Forest Ecology and Management 184: 315–335. Galbraith, S.L., and W.H. Martin. 2005. Three decades of overstory and species change in a mixed mesophytic forest in eastern Kentucky. Castanea 70: 115–128. Gleason, H.A., and A. Cronquist. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada, second edition. The New York Botanical Garden, Bronx, New York, New York, USA. Groeschl, D.A., J.E. Johnson, and D.W. Smith. 1992. Early vegetative response to wild fire in a table mountain-pitch pine forest. International Journal of Wildland Fire 2: 177–184. Guldin, J.M., E. Poole, E. Heitsman, J. Kagrick, and R.M. Muzika. 2006. Ground truth assessments of forests affected by oak decline and red oak borer in the Interior Highlands of Arkansas, Oklahoma, and Missouri—preliminary results for overstory analysis. Pages 415–419 in: K.F. Connor, editor. Proceedings of the 13th Biennial Southern Silvicultural Research Conference. USDA Forest Service General Technical Report SRS-92, Asheville, North Carolina, USA. Harmon, M.E. 1982. Fire history of the westernmost portion of Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 109: 74–79. Heitzman, E., A. Grell, M. Spetich, and D. Starkey. 2007. Changes in forest structure associated with oak decline in severely impacted areas of northern Arkansas. Southern Journal of Applied Forestry 31: 17–22. Hoffman, C.H., and R.F. Anderson. 1945. Effect of southern pine beetle on timber losses and natural restocking. Journal of Forestry 43: 436–439. Hooper, R.M. 1969. Prescribed burning for laurel and rhododendron control in the southern Appalachians. USDA Forest Service Research Note SE-116, Asheville, North Carolina, USA. Hutchinson, T.F., and S. Sutherland. 2000. Fire and understory vegetation: a large-scale study in Ohio and a search for general response patterns in central hardwood forests. Pages 64–74 in: D.A. Yaussy, compiler. Proceedings: Workshop on Fire, People, and the Central Hardwoods Landscape. USDA Forest Service General Technical Report NE-274, Durham, New Hampshire, USA. Hutchinson, T.F., B.E.J. Boerner, S. Sutherland, E.K. Sutherland, M. Ortt, and L.R. Iverson. 2005. Prescribed fire effects on the herbaceous layer of mixed-oak forests. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 35: 877–890. Johnson, P.S. 1985. Regenerating oaks in the lake states. Pages 98–109 in: J.E. Johnson, editor. Proceedings, Challenges in Oak Management and Utilization. Cooperative Extension Service, University of Wisconsin-Extension, Madison, USA. Keyser, P.D., P. Brose, D. Van Lear, and K.M. Burtner. 1996. Enhancing oak regeneration with fire in shelterwood stands: preliminary trials. Transactions of the 61st North American Wildland and Natural Resource Conference: 215–219. Kirkman, L.K., C.L. Brown, and D.J. Leopold. 2007. Native trees of the southeast. Timber Press, Portland, Oregon, USA. Kuddes-Fischer, L.M., and M.A. Arthur. 2002. Response of understory vegetation and tree regeneration to a single prescribed fire in oak-pine forests. Natural Areas Journal 22: 43–52. Lafon, C.W., J.D. Waldron, D.M. Cairns, M.D. Tchakerian, R.N. Coulson, and K.D. Klepzig. 2007. Modeling the effects of fire on the long-term dynamics and restoration of yellow pine and oak forests in the southern Appalachian Mountains. Restoration Ecology 15: 400–411. Langdon, O.G. 1981. Some effects of prescribed fire on understory vegetation in loblolly pine stands. Pages 143–153 in: Proceedings, Prescribed Fire and Wildfire in Southern Forests. Clemson University, South Carolina, USA. Lorimer, C.G. 1984. Development of the red maple understory in northeastern oak forests. Forest Science 30: 3–22. Lorimer, C.G. 1985. The role of fire in perpetuation of oak forests. Pages 8–25 in: J.E. John, editor. Challenges in oak management and utilization. Cooperative Extension Service, University of Wisconsin, Madison, USA. Magurran, A.E. 2004. Measuring biological diversity. Blackwells, Oxford, United Kingdom. Matlack, G.R., D.J. Gibson, and R.E. Good. 1993. Regeneration of the shrub Gaylussacia baccata and associated species after low-intensity fire in an Atlantic coastal plain forest. American Journal of Botany 80: 158–173. McCarthy D.R., and K.J. Brown. 2006. Soil respiration response to topography, canopy cover, and prescribed burning in an oak-hickory forest in southeastern Ohio. Forest Ecology and Management 237: 94–102. McGee G.G., D.J. Leopold, and R.D. Nyland. 1995. Understory response to spring-time prescribed fire in two New York transition oak forests. Forest Ecology and Management 76: 149–168. McGinty, D.T. 1972. The ecological roles of Kalmia latifolia L. and Rhododendron maximum L. in the hardwood forest at Coweeta. Thesis, University of Georgia, Athens, USA. Mitchell, R.J., J.K Hiers, J.J. O’Brien, S.B Jack, and R.T. Engstrom. 2006. Silviculture that sustains: the nexus between silviculture, frequent prescribed fire and conservation of biodiversity in longleaf pine forests of the southeastern United States. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 36: 2724–2736. Nicholas, N.S., and P.S. White. 1984. The effect of southern pine beetle on fuel loading in yellow pine forest of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. US Department of the Interior National Park Service. Research/Resource Management Report SER-73, Atlanta, Georgia, USA. Nowacki G.J., and M.D. Abrams. 1992. Community, edaphic, and historical analysis of mixed oak forests of the Ridge and Valley province in central Pennsylvania. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 22: 790–800. Oak, S.W., J.R. Steinman, D.A. Starkey, and E.K. Yockey. 2004. Assessing oak decline incidence and distribution in the southern US using forest inventory and analysis data. Pages 236–242 in: M.A. Spetich, editor. Upland Oak Ecology Symposium: History, Current Conditions, and Sustainability. USDA Forest Service General Technical Report SRS-73, Asheville, North Carolina, USA. Petersen, S.M., and P.B. Drewa. 2006. Did lightning-initiated growing season fires characterize oak-dominated ecosystems of southern Ohio? Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society 133: 217–224. Pielou, E.C. 1966. The measurement of diversity in different types of biological collections. Journal of Theoretical Biology 13: 131–144. Rentch, J.S., and R.R. Hicks. 2005. Changes in presettlement forest composition for five areas in the central hardwood forest. Natural Areas Journal 25: 228–238. Schmalzer PA, and C.R. Hinkle. 1992. Recovery of oak-saw palmetto scrub after fire. Castanea 57: 158–173. Signell, S.A., M.D. Abrams, J.C. Hovis, and S.W. Henry. 2005. Impact of multiple fires on stand structure and tree regeneration in central Appalachian oak forests. Forest Ecology and Management 218: 146–158. Smith, R.N. 1991. Species composition, stand structure, and woody detrital dynamics associated with pine mortality in the southern Appalachians. Thesis, University of Georgia, Athens, USA. Stephenson, L.L., A.N. Ash, and D.F. Stauffer. 1993. Appalachian oak forests. Pages 305–338 in: W.H. Martin, S.G. Boyce, and A.C. Echternacht, editors. Biodiversity of the southeastern United States, upland terrestrial communities. John Wiley and Sons, New York, New York, USA. Swank, W.T., S.G. McNulty, L.W. Swift, Jr. 1994. Opportunities for forest hydrology applications to ecosystem management. Pages 19–29 in: T. Ohta, Y. Fukushima, and M. Suzuki, editors. Proceedings of the International Symposium on Forest Hydrology. International Union of Forestry Research Organization, Tokyo, Japan. Swift, L.W., K.J. Elliott, R.D. Ottmar, and R.E. Vihnanek. 1993. Site preparation burning to improve southern Appalachian pine-hardwood stands: fire characteristics and soil erosion, moisture, and temperature. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 23: 2242–2254. Thomas, D.J. 1996. Soil survey of Macon County, North Carolina. USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service, Washington, D.C., USA. Turner, M.G., W.H. Romme, R.H. Gardner, and W.W. Hargrove. 1997. Effects of fire size and pattern on early succession in Yellowstone National Park. Ecological Monographs 67: 411–433. Van Mantgem, P., and W.M. Schwartz. 2001. Monitoring fire effects of managed burns and wildfire: coming to terms with pseudoreplication. Natural Areas Journal 21: 266–273. Van Lear D.H., and V.J. Johnson. 1983. Effects of prescribed burning in the southern Appalachian and upper Piedmont forest: a review. Department of Forestry, Clemson University, Bulletin 36, Clemson, South Carolina, USA. Van Lear, D.H., and T.A Waldrop. 1989. History, use, and effects of fire in the Appalachians. USDA Forest Service General Technical Report SE-54, Asheville, North Carolina, USA. Van Lear, D.H., and J.M. Watt. 1993. The role of fire in oak regeneration. Pages 66–78 in: D.L. Loftis and C.E. McGee, editors. Oak regeneration: serious problems practical recommendations. USDA Forest Service General Technical Report SE-84, Ashville, North Carolina, USA. Van Lear, D.H., K.R. Russell, D.E. Moorman, and D.B. Vandermast. 2004. Initial vegetation response to prescribed fire in some oak-hickory forests of the South Carolina Piedmont. Natural Areas Journal 24: 216–222. Van Lear, D.H., W.D. Carroll, P.R. Kapeluck, and R. Johnson. 2005. History and restoration of the longleaf pine-grassland ecosystem: implications for species at risk. Forest Ecology and Management 211: 150–165. Vose, J.M., W.T. Swank, and B.D. Clinton. 1994. Fire, drought, and forest management influences on pine/hardwood ecosystems in the southern Appalachians. Pages 232–238 in: Proceedings of the 12th Conference on Fire and Forest Meteorology. Society of American Foresters, Bethesda, Maryland, USA. Vose, J.M., W.T. Swank, B.D. Clinton, R.L. Hendrick, and A.E. Major. 1997. Using fire to restore pine/hardwood ecosystems in the southern Appalachians of North Carolina. Pages 149–154 in: Proceedings of Fire Effects on Rare and Endangered Species and Habitats. International Association of Wildland Fire, Fairfield, Washington, USA. Vose, J.M., W.T. Swank, B.D. Clinton, J.D. Knoepp, and L.W. Swift, Jr. 1999. Using prescribed fire to restore southern Appalachian pine-hardwood ecosystems: effects on mass, carbon, and nutrients. Forest Ecology and Management 114: 215–226. Waldrop, T.A., and P.H. Brose. 1999. A comparison of fire intensity levels for stand replacement of Table Mountain pine (Pinus pungens Lamb.). Forest Ecology and Management 113: 155–166. Waldrop, T.A., N.T. Welch, P.H. Brose, K.J. Elliott, H.H. Mohr, E.A. Gray, and F.H Ellis. 2000. Current research on restoring ridgetop pine communities with stand replacement fire. Pages 103–109 in: D.A. Yaussey, editor. Proceedings: Workshop on Fire, People, and the Central Hardwood Landscape. US Department of Agriculture Forest Service General Technical Report NRS-274. Waldrop, T.A., P.H. Brose, N.T. Welch, H.H. Mohr, E.A. Gray, F.H. Tainter, and L.E. Ellis. 2003. Are crown fires necessary for Table Mountain pine? Pages 157–163 in: K.E.M. Galley, R.C. Klinger, and N.G Sugibara, editors. Fire Conference 2000: The First National Congress on Fire Ecology, Prevention, and Management. Miscellaneous Publication No. 13. Tall Timbers Research Station, Tallahassee, Florida, USA. Waldrop, T.A., D. Yaussy, R.J. Phillips, T.A. Hutchinson, L. Brudnak, and R.A.J. Boerner. 2008. Fuel reduction treatments affect vegetation structure of hardwood forests in western North Carolina and southern Ohio, USA. Forest Ecology and Management 255: 3117–3129. Ward, J.S., and G.R. Stephens. 1989. Long-term effects of a 1932 surface fire on stand structure in a Connecticut mixed-hardwoods forest. Pages 267–273 in: G. Rink and C.A. Budelsky, editors. Proceedings of the 7th Central Hardwood Forest Conference. USDA General Technical Report NC-132, St. Paul, Minnesota, USA. Welch, N.T., T.A. Waldrop, and E.R. Buckner. 2000. Response of southern Appalachian Table Mountain pine (Pinus pungens) and pitch pine (P. rigida) stands to prescribed burning. Forest Ecology and Management 136: 185–197.