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Title
Fire timing in relation to masting: an important determinant of post-fire recruitment success for the obligate-seeding arid zone soft spinifex (Triodia pungens)
Author(s)
Fensham, Roderick J
Publication Date
2018-01
Early Online Version
Open Access
Yes
Abstract
<p><b>• Background and Aims</b> Plant species with fire-triggered germination are common in many fire-prone ecosystems. For such plants, fire timing in relation to the timing of reproduction may strongly influence post-fire population regeneration if: (<i>a</i>) flowering occurs infrequently (e.g. plants are mast seeders); and (<i>b</i>) seed survival rates are low and input from the current year’s flowering therefore contributes a large proportion of the viable dormant seedbank. The role of fire timing in relation to masting as a driver of post-fire recruitment has rarely been examined directly, so this study tested the hypothesis that fires shortly after masting trigger increased recruitment of the obligate-seeding arid zone spinifex, <i>Triodia pungens</i> R. Br., an iteroparous masting grass with smoke-cued germination.</p> <p><b>• Methods</b> Phenological monitoring of <i>T. pungens</i> was conducted over 5 years, while a longitudinal seedbank study assessed the influence of seeding events on soil-stored seedbank dynamics. Concurrently, a fire experiment with randomized blocking was undertaken to test whether <i>T. pungens</i> hummocks burnt shortly after masting have greater post-fire recruitment than hummocks burnt when there has not been recent input of seeds.</p> <p><b>• Key Results</b> <i>Triodia pungens</i> flowered in all years, though most flowerings were characterized by high rates of flower abortion. A mast flowering with high seed set in 2012 triggered approx. 200-fold increases in seedbank densities, and seedbank densities remained elevated for 24 months after this event. The fire experiment showed significantly higher recruitment around hummocks burnt 6 months after the 2012 mast event than a round hummocks that were burnt but prevented from masting by having inflorescences clipped.</p> <p><b>• Conclusions</b> Fires shortly after masting trigger mass recruitment in <i>T. pungens</i> because such fires synchronize an appropriate germination cue (smoke) with periods when seedbank densities are elevated. Interactions between natural fire regimes, seedbank dynamics and fire management prescriptions must be considered carefully when managing fire-sensitive masting plants such as <i>T. pungens</i>.</p>
Publication Type
Journal Article
Source of Publication
Annals of Botany, 121(1), p. 119-128
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Socio-Economic Objective (SEO) 2020
2017-12-27
Place of Publication
United Kingdom
ISSN
1095-8290
0305-7364
Fields of Research (FoR) 2020
Peer Reviewed
Yes
HERDC Category Description
Peer Reviewed
Yes
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