Effects of biological legacies and herbivory on fuels and flammability traits: A long‐term experimental study of alternative stable states

Ecological memory, often determined by the extent and type of retained biological legacies present following disturbance, may produce persistent landscape patterns. However, after fire, the persistence or switch to an alternative state may depend on the complex interplay of ecological memory (biolog...

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Main Authors: Blackhall, Melissa, Raffaele, Estela, Paritsis, Juan, Tiribelli, Florencia, Morales, Juan M., Kitzberger, Thomas, Gowda, Juan H., Veblen, Thomas T.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: CU Scholar 2017
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Online Access:https://scholar.colorado.edu/geog_facpapers/33
https://scholar.colorado.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1027&context=geog_facpapers
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spelling ftunicolboulder:oai:scholar.colorado.edu:geog_facpapers-1027 2023-05-15T13:49:37+02:00 Effects of biological legacies and herbivory on fuels and flammability traits: A long‐term experimental study of alternative stable states Blackhall, Melissa Raffaele, Estela Paritsis, Juan Tiribelli, Florencia Morales, Juan M. Kitzberger, Thomas Gowda, Juan H. Veblen, Thomas T. 2017-04-01T07:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholar.colorado.edu/geog_facpapers/33 https://scholar.colorado.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1027&context=geog_facpapers unknown CU Scholar https://scholar.colorado.edu/geog_facpapers/33 https://scholar.colorado.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1027&context=geog_facpapers Geography Faculty Contributions text 2017 ftunicolboulder 2019-01-05T00:29:43Z Ecological memory, often determined by the extent and type of retained biological legacies present following disturbance, may produce persistent landscape patterns. However, after fire, the persistence or switch to an alternative state may depend on the complex interplay of ecological memory (biological legacies) and potential effects of new external factors influencing the post‐fire environment. The current study assesses both the strength of ecological memory resulting from biological legacies of pre‐burn vegetation types as well as post‐fire effects of livestock. Following a severe fire in 1999, we set up a network of long‐term exclosures to examine the effects of legacies and cumulative herbivory by cattle on fuel types, amounts, distribution, flammability and microenvironmental conditions in two post‐fire communities representing alternative fire‐driven states: pyrophobic Nothofagus pumilio subalpine forests and pyrophytic Nothofagus antarctica tall shrublands in northwestern Patagonia, Argentina. Our results show that the retained post‐disturbance legacies of tall shrublands and subalpine forests largely determine fuel and flammability traits of the post‐fire plant communities 16 years after fire. The importance of biological legacies retained from the unburned plant communities was reflected by the substantially higher amounts of total fine fuel, greater vertical and horizontal fuel continuity and the higher temperatures reached during experimental tissue combustion at post‐fire shrubland compared to post‐fire forest sites. We show that herbivores may produce antagonistic effects on flammability by decreasing tissue ignitability, total fine fuel and litter depth, and disrupting the vertical and horizontal fine fuel continuity, therefore reducing the probability of fire propagation. However, cattle can increase ratios of dead to live fine fuels, reduce soil moisture, and inhibit tree height growth to canopy size, consequently impeding the development of a closed pyrophobic forest canopy. Synthesis. Our results support the hypothesis that biological legacies, most importantly the dominance by pyrophytic woody plants that resprout vigorously vs. the dominance by pyrophobic obligate seeders, favour fuel and flammability characteristics at the community level which reinforce the mechanisms maintaining pyrophytic shrublands vs. pyrophobic forests. Herbivory by introduced cattle can partially blur sharp pyrophobic/pyrophytic state boundaries by promoting the development of novel post‐fire transitional states. Text Antarc* Antarctica University of Colorado, Boulder: CU Scholar Patagonia Argentina
institution Open Polar
collection University of Colorado, Boulder: CU Scholar
op_collection_id ftunicolboulder
language unknown
description Ecological memory, often determined by the extent and type of retained biological legacies present following disturbance, may produce persistent landscape patterns. However, after fire, the persistence or switch to an alternative state may depend on the complex interplay of ecological memory (biological legacies) and potential effects of new external factors influencing the post‐fire environment. The current study assesses both the strength of ecological memory resulting from biological legacies of pre‐burn vegetation types as well as post‐fire effects of livestock. Following a severe fire in 1999, we set up a network of long‐term exclosures to examine the effects of legacies and cumulative herbivory by cattle on fuel types, amounts, distribution, flammability and microenvironmental conditions in two post‐fire communities representing alternative fire‐driven states: pyrophobic Nothofagus pumilio subalpine forests and pyrophytic Nothofagus antarctica tall shrublands in northwestern Patagonia, Argentina. Our results show that the retained post‐disturbance legacies of tall shrublands and subalpine forests largely determine fuel and flammability traits of the post‐fire plant communities 16 years after fire. The importance of biological legacies retained from the unburned plant communities was reflected by the substantially higher amounts of total fine fuel, greater vertical and horizontal fuel continuity and the higher temperatures reached during experimental tissue combustion at post‐fire shrubland compared to post‐fire forest sites. We show that herbivores may produce antagonistic effects on flammability by decreasing tissue ignitability, total fine fuel and litter depth, and disrupting the vertical and horizontal fine fuel continuity, therefore reducing the probability of fire propagation. However, cattle can increase ratios of dead to live fine fuels, reduce soil moisture, and inhibit tree height growth to canopy size, consequently impeding the development of a closed pyrophobic forest canopy. Synthesis. Our results support the hypothesis that biological legacies, most importantly the dominance by pyrophytic woody plants that resprout vigorously vs. the dominance by pyrophobic obligate seeders, favour fuel and flammability characteristics at the community level which reinforce the mechanisms maintaining pyrophytic shrublands vs. pyrophobic forests. Herbivory by introduced cattle can partially blur sharp pyrophobic/pyrophytic state boundaries by promoting the development of novel post‐fire transitional states.
format Text
author Blackhall, Melissa
Raffaele, Estela
Paritsis, Juan
Tiribelli, Florencia
Morales, Juan M.
Kitzberger, Thomas
Gowda, Juan H.
Veblen, Thomas T.
spellingShingle Blackhall, Melissa
Raffaele, Estela
Paritsis, Juan
Tiribelli, Florencia
Morales, Juan M.
Kitzberger, Thomas
Gowda, Juan H.
Veblen, Thomas T.
Effects of biological legacies and herbivory on fuels and flammability traits: A long‐term experimental study of alternative stable states
author_facet Blackhall, Melissa
Raffaele, Estela
Paritsis, Juan
Tiribelli, Florencia
Morales, Juan M.
Kitzberger, Thomas
Gowda, Juan H.
Veblen, Thomas T.
author_sort Blackhall, Melissa
title Effects of biological legacies and herbivory on fuels and flammability traits: A long‐term experimental study of alternative stable states
title_short Effects of biological legacies and herbivory on fuels and flammability traits: A long‐term experimental study of alternative stable states
title_full Effects of biological legacies and herbivory on fuels and flammability traits: A long‐term experimental study of alternative stable states
title_fullStr Effects of biological legacies and herbivory on fuels and flammability traits: A long‐term experimental study of alternative stable states
title_full_unstemmed Effects of biological legacies and herbivory on fuels and flammability traits: A long‐term experimental study of alternative stable states
title_sort effects of biological legacies and herbivory on fuels and flammability traits: a long‐term experimental study of alternative stable states
publisher CU Scholar
publishDate 2017
url https://scholar.colorado.edu/geog_facpapers/33
https://scholar.colorado.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1027&context=geog_facpapers
geographic Patagonia
Argentina
geographic_facet Patagonia
Argentina
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
op_source Geography Faculty Contributions
op_relation https://scholar.colorado.edu/geog_facpapers/33
https://scholar.colorado.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1027&context=geog_facpapers
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