Direct and indirect effects of post-fire conditions on successional pathways and ecological processes in black spruce-Kalmia forests

The goal of this thesis was to estimate the relative importance of the mechanisms by which forest stands of east-central Newfoundland are replaced by unproductive dwarf-shrub communities following wildfire. Sheep laurel (Kalmia angustifolia L.) is the dominant species of these heath communities and...

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Main Author: Bloom, Robin G.
Other Authors: Mallik, Azim, Mackereth, Rob, Hecnar, Stephen, Macdonald, Alastair D.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:http://knowledgecommons.lakeheadu.ca/handle/2453/3151
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spelling ftlakeheaduniv:oai:knowledgecommons.lakeheadu.ca:2453/3151 2023-05-15T17:21:08+02:00 Direct and indirect effects of post-fire conditions on successional pathways and ecological processes in black spruce-Kalmia forests Bloom, Robin G. Mallik, Azim Mackereth, Rob Hecnar, Stephen Macdonald, Alastair D. 2001 application/pdf http://knowledgecommons.lakeheadu.ca/handle/2453/3151 en_US eng http://knowledgecommons.lakeheadu.ca/handle/2453/3151 Forest regeneration Effect of wildfires on Newfoundland and Labrador Black spruce Effect of wildfires on Newfoundland and Labrador Sheep laurel and black spruce Thesis 2001 ftlakeheaduniv 2022-05-01T17:26:20Z The goal of this thesis was to estimate the relative importance of the mechanisms by which forest stands of east-central Newfoundland are replaced by unproductive dwarf-shrub communities following wildfire. Sheep laurel (Kalmia angustifolia L.) is the dominant species of these heath communities and its proliferation after forest fires may initiate a retrogressive pathway rather than forest stand replacement. This problem is addressed in four chapters that evaluate the roles o f differential plant establishment success (Chapters I & II), availability o f limiting resources (Chapter III) and the availability o f canopy cover (Chapter IV) as factors affecting vegetation dynamics following catastrophic fire. The main findings of the research are (1) that at least part of the inhibition pathway is caused by physical limitations on regeneration niches for black spruce and that the biotic process of competition from Kalmia is a less proximate cause o f forest regeneration failure; (2) plant functional diversity and black spruce productivity are restricted spatially and physiologically by patterns in fire severity; (3) burned habitats dominated by Kalmia have suppressed species richness and functional diversity irrespective o f low and high concentrations o f limiting resources; (4) failure o f black spruce to re-colonize these sites and provide cover to Kalmia is associated with measurable reductions in soil microbial activity and herb abundance. A recurring theme among these chapters is the inconsistency between the pattern o f stand retrogression observed in eastern Newfoundland and general theoretical models of succession as they have developed in the ecological literature. As a result of these comparisons, this thesis supports the view that the prevailing models of succession fail to be generalizable across geographic and environmental gradients. In the eastern boreal forest, the factors of fire severity and restriction o f regeneration niches for successional species are the critical aspects of disturbance ecology which are not explicitly accounted for in existing successional models. Until general theories account for forces other than competition that potentially affect community structure, a unified theory of plant succession will remain elusive. Thesis Newfoundland Lakehead University Knowledge Commons Newfoundland
institution Open Polar
collection Lakehead University Knowledge Commons
op_collection_id ftlakeheaduniv
language English
topic Forest regeneration Effect of wildfires on Newfoundland and Labrador
Black spruce Effect of wildfires on Newfoundland and Labrador
Sheep laurel and black spruce
spellingShingle Forest regeneration Effect of wildfires on Newfoundland and Labrador
Black spruce Effect of wildfires on Newfoundland and Labrador
Sheep laurel and black spruce
Bloom, Robin G.
Direct and indirect effects of post-fire conditions on successional pathways and ecological processes in black spruce-Kalmia forests
topic_facet Forest regeneration Effect of wildfires on Newfoundland and Labrador
Black spruce Effect of wildfires on Newfoundland and Labrador
Sheep laurel and black spruce
description The goal of this thesis was to estimate the relative importance of the mechanisms by which forest stands of east-central Newfoundland are replaced by unproductive dwarf-shrub communities following wildfire. Sheep laurel (Kalmia angustifolia L.) is the dominant species of these heath communities and its proliferation after forest fires may initiate a retrogressive pathway rather than forest stand replacement. This problem is addressed in four chapters that evaluate the roles o f differential plant establishment success (Chapters I & II), availability o f limiting resources (Chapter III) and the availability o f canopy cover (Chapter IV) as factors affecting vegetation dynamics following catastrophic fire. The main findings of the research are (1) that at least part of the inhibition pathway is caused by physical limitations on regeneration niches for black spruce and that the biotic process of competition from Kalmia is a less proximate cause o f forest regeneration failure; (2) plant functional diversity and black spruce productivity are restricted spatially and physiologically by patterns in fire severity; (3) burned habitats dominated by Kalmia have suppressed species richness and functional diversity irrespective o f low and high concentrations o f limiting resources; (4) failure o f black spruce to re-colonize these sites and provide cover to Kalmia is associated with measurable reductions in soil microbial activity and herb abundance. A recurring theme among these chapters is the inconsistency between the pattern o f stand retrogression observed in eastern Newfoundland and general theoretical models of succession as they have developed in the ecological literature. As a result of these comparisons, this thesis supports the view that the prevailing models of succession fail to be generalizable across geographic and environmental gradients. In the eastern boreal forest, the factors of fire severity and restriction o f regeneration niches for successional species are the critical aspects of disturbance ecology which are not explicitly accounted for in existing successional models. Until general theories account for forces other than competition that potentially affect community structure, a unified theory of plant succession will remain elusive.
author2 Mallik, Azim
Mackereth, Rob
Hecnar, Stephen
Macdonald, Alastair D.
format Thesis
author Bloom, Robin G.
author_facet Bloom, Robin G.
author_sort Bloom, Robin G.
title Direct and indirect effects of post-fire conditions on successional pathways and ecological processes in black spruce-Kalmia forests
title_short Direct and indirect effects of post-fire conditions on successional pathways and ecological processes in black spruce-Kalmia forests
title_full Direct and indirect effects of post-fire conditions on successional pathways and ecological processes in black spruce-Kalmia forests
title_fullStr Direct and indirect effects of post-fire conditions on successional pathways and ecological processes in black spruce-Kalmia forests
title_full_unstemmed Direct and indirect effects of post-fire conditions on successional pathways and ecological processes in black spruce-Kalmia forests
title_sort direct and indirect effects of post-fire conditions on successional pathways and ecological processes in black spruce-kalmia forests
publishDate 2001
url http://knowledgecommons.lakeheadu.ca/handle/2453/3151
geographic Newfoundland
geographic_facet Newfoundland
genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_relation http://knowledgecommons.lakeheadu.ca/handle/2453/3151
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