Now showing 1 - 4 of 4
  • Publication
    Post-fire recovery of woody plants in the New England Tableland Bioregion
    (National Herbarium of New South Wales, Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney, 2009) ; ;
    Campbell, Monica L
    ;
    Copeland, Lachlan
    The resprouting response of plant species to fire is a key life history trait that has profound effects on post-fire population dynamics and community composition. This study documents the post-fire response (resprouting and maturation times) of woody species in six contrasting formations in the New England Tableland Bioregion of eastern Australia. Rainforest had the highest proportion of resprouting woody taxa and rocky outcrops had the lowest. Surprisingly, no significant difference in the median maturation length was found among habitats, but the communities varied in the range of maturation times. Within these communities, seedlings of species killed by fire, mature faster than seedlings of species that resprout. The slowest maturing species were those that have canopy held seed banks and were killed by fire, and these were used as indicator species to examine fire immaturity risk. Finally, we examine whether current fire management immaturity thresholds appear to be appropriate for these communities and find they need to be amended.
  • Publication
    Trade-offs in resource allocation that favour resprouting affect the competitive ability of woody seedlings in grassy communities
    (Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2009) ;
    1. Differences in the competitive ability of plant functional groups at early life-history stages can have important consequences for community structure. In particular, trade-offs in allocation to roots by woody plant seedlings may influence competitive ability with grasses in fire-prone vegetation. 2. We followed post-fire survival of seedlings of facultative resprouter and obligate seeder (firekilled) shrubs for 3 years in adjacent communities with a grassy/graminoid ground stratum (54 plots, 20 m²) or a non-graminoid ground stratum(54 plots, 20 m²). 3. The competitive effect of a grass (Poa) on seedlings of three congeneric pairs of resprouters and obligate seeder shrubs was tested in a factorial experiment where nutrients and the grass competitor were manipulated. The effects of grass (+,-) and nutrients (+,-) on the growth response, biomass allocation and root carbohydrate storage were measured after harvest at 26 weeks and the relative neighbour effect calculated. 4. Post-fire shrub seedling survival was high with about 50% (2163 seedlings) surviving over 3 years, but this varied between habitats and functional groups. In the grassy/graminoid ground layer communities 27% of shrub seedlings survived, whereas in the habitats with a more open ground stratum 55% of seedlings survived. In grassy habitats, obligate seeder survival was lower (23% survival) than that of resprouter seedlings (35% survival). Similarly, in open habitats, obligate seeder seedling survival was lower (51%) than that of resprouter seedlings (64% survival). 5. Growth of both resprouters and obligate seeders in our manipulative experiment was strongly reduced in the presence of a grass competitor. Moreover, the addition of nutrients increased the relative difference in mass and height between those seedlings exposed to a grass competitor and those grown without a competitor. Resprouter species allocated more to roots under competition and were less affected by grass competition than obligate seeders. 6. Synthesis. The results of seedling survival and of the experiment on the effects of grass competition on woody plant seedlings suggest that early life-history trade-offs in allocation influence seedling survival. Allocation to resprouting appears to enhance the ability of shrub seedlings to survive grass competition. We propose that grass competition across productivity gradients plays an important role in influencing landscape-level distribution patterns of woody resprouters.
  • Publication
    Mapping of Fire Severity and Comparison of Severity Indices Across Vegetation Types in Gibraltar Range National Park, Australia
    (Copernicus GmbH, 2008) ; ;
    Munoz-Robles, Carlos
    ;
    The effect of fire on natural resources is termed "fire severity" and is related to the energy output of the fire. Recently the term "burn severity" has been introduced to identify the impacts of fire on soil and plants when the fire has been extinguished. This study addresses the assessment of a large wildfire in Gibraltar Range National Park, Australia, through remote sensing of fire severity and explores the spatial relationships between, fire severity and biophysical factors. Burn severity indices were developed from Landsat TM satellite images using pre-fire and post-fire images. Reflectance values computed from Landsat Enhanced Thematic Mapper (ETM) images acquired before and after the fire were used to estimate the Normalised Burn Ratio (NBR), which incorporates the near and mid infrared bands. Spatial distribution of ANBR data were calibrated with field observations and threshold values of burn severity were used to classify fire severity into 5 severity classes per vegetation type. ANBR values were extracted from different representative fire severities and spatial relationships were developed between ANBR and vegetation type, fuel type, fire danger index, time since fire, fire frequency, slope and rockiness in order to account for variables influencing fire severity patterns. General linear models and tests of significance were used to ascertain whether the effects of individual factors were statistically significant. The various models tested showed that no single factor (weather, fuel or landscape) accounted for the burn severity pattern. Fire weather and vegetation type Were found to be the key factors in the models.
  • Publication
    Vegetation, terrain and fire history shape the impact of extreme weather on fire severity and ecosystem response
    (Opulus Press, 2014) ; ;
    Bradstock, Ross A
    ;
    Munoz-Robles, Carlos
    ;
    Questions: Do endogenous (landscape/vegetation) or exogenous (weather) factors control fire severity? During severe fire weather, is there convergence in fire severity across rain forest, forests and heathlands such that all locations burn with similarly high severity? Are there long-term effects of fire severity in temperate crown-fire ecosystems? Location: Montane rain forests, eucalypt forests and heaths in the temperate climate zone of eastern Australia (Washpool/Gibraltar Range National Park). Methods: The immediate and longer-term effects of fire weather and landscape (terrain, previous fire history and vegetation type) factors on fire severity and ecosystem response were measured using remote sensing and ground measures of microclimate, productivity and plant resprouting at 45 sites. Results: Fire weather strongly interacted with terrain, antecedent fire history and vegetation type, resulting in complex mosaics of mixed fire severity rather than convergence to uniform fire severity. Vegetation type influenced the effects of time-since-fire and fire frequency on fire severity, suggesting differential fire feedbacks. High fire severity left a long-term imprint on total reflectance, ground temperatures and productivity of the vegetation, but these effects were not uniform across vegetation types. The abundance of resprouting species was not strongly affected by fire severity. Conclusions: There was evidence for strong weather control of fire severity but fire history, terrain and vegetation shape the immediate effect due to the contrasting pyrogenic vs pyrophobic nature of the vegetation mosaic. The short-term dominance of weather as a driver of fire severity is only weakly related to the longer-term ecosystem response because of the strong resprouting ability of the canopy dominants, even in rain forest. The forest complexes of eastern Australia appear highly resilient to high fire severity in both structure and floristics, which may influence long-term feedbacks.