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Author(s):
Kerry Kemp, Philip E. Higuera, Penelope Morgan
Year Published:

Cataloging Information

Topic(s):
Fire Ecology
Fire Effects
Ecological - First Order
Fire Regime
Fire Intensity / Burn Severity
Fire and Landscape Mosaics
Patch Size
Recovery after fire
Resilience
Ecosystem(s):
Montane dry mixed-conifer forest

NRFSN number: 14018
FRAMES RCS number: 21683
TTRS number: 32585
Record updated:

Context: An increase in the incidence of large wildfires worldwide has prompted concerns about the resilience of forest ecosystems, particularly in the western U.S., where recent changes are linked with climate warming and 20th-century land management practices. Objectives: To study forest resilience to recent wildfires, we examined relationships among fire legacies, landscape features, ecological conditions, and patterns of post-fire conifer regeneration. Methods: We quantified regeneration across 182 sites in 21 recent large fires in dry mixed-conifer forests of the U.S. northern Rockies. We used logistic and negative binomial regression to predict the probability of establishment and abundance of conifers 5-13 years post-fire. Results: Seedling densities varied widely across all sites (0-127,500 seedlings ha-1) and were best explained by variability in distance to live seed sources (β = -0.014, p = 0.002) and pre-fire tree basal area (β = 0.072, p = 0.008). Beyond 95 m from the nearest live seed source, the probability of seedling establishment was low. Across all the fires we studied, 75% of the burned area with high tree mortality was within this 95-m threshold, suggesting the presence of live seed trees to facilitate natural regeneration. Conclusions: Combined with the mix of species present within the burn mosaic, dry mixed-conifer forests will be resilient to large fires across our study region, provided that seedlings survive, fire do not become more frequent, high-severity patches do not get significantly larger, and post-fire climate conditions remain suitable for seedling establishment and survival.

Citation

Kemp, Kerry B.; Higuera, Philip E.; Morgan, Penelope. 2016. Fire legacies impact conifer regeneration across environmental gradients in the U.S. northern Rockies. Landscape Ecology. 31(3): 619-636.

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