Register      Login
International Journal of Wildland Fire International Journal of Wildland Fire Society
Journal of the International Association of Wildland Fire
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Patterns of post-fire flowering and fruiting in Chlorogalum pomeridianum var. pomeridianum (DC.) Kunth in southern California chaparral

Mark Borchert A C and Claudia M. Tyler B
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A San Bernardino National Forest, San Bernardino, 602 South Tippecanoe Ave, San Bernardino, CA 92408, USA.

B Institute for Computational Earth System Science, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106, USA.

C Corresponding author. Email: mborchert@fs.fed.us

International Journal of Wildland Fire 18(5) 623-630 https://doi.org/10.1071/WF08039
Submitted: 6 March 2008  Accepted: 29 July 2008   Published: 10 August 2009

Abstract

For many geophytes living in Mediterranean ecosystems, the passage of fire can produce bursts of flowering, seed production, vegetative growth, and seedling recruitment. In the present study, we investigated patterns of flowering and fruit production of the chaparral geophyte Chlorogalum pomeridianum (common soap plant) at two sites: one burned in a prescribed fire and one in nearby unburned chaparral. Both sites burned in a wildfire 2 years later, and we continued monitoring marked plants for an additional 6 years, enabling us to observe the effects of recent reburning on reproduction and growth. We found that flowering was stimulated by fire but was not strictly fire-dependent. There was a positive relationship between bulb size and leaf area, as well as between these two characteristics and flower and fruit production. Flower stalk initiation occurred when plants reached a minimum leaf area of ~1000 cm2, indicating that a minimum bulb size must be reached before reproductive effort is initiated. Direct herbivory of flowering stalks reduced fruiting and leaf herbivory indirectly prevented the initiation of flowering stalks. In the first several years after fire, flower and fruit production could be explained by resource matching but in subsequent years, resource matching was replaced by resource switching.

Additional keywords: bulb, cost of reproduction, fire-dependent reproduction, fire-induced flowering, geophyte, herbivory, Liliaceae, Mediterranean.


Acknowledgements

We wish to thank Regina Quiñiones, Dianne Cross and Terry Austin for assisting us with field and laboratory work. An anonymous reviewer offered many helpful suggestions to improve the manuscript.


References


Borchert M (1989) Post-fire demography of Thermopsis macrophylla H. A. var. agnina J. T. Howell (Fabaceae), a rare perennial herb in chaparral. American Midland Naturalist  122, 120–132.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | Jernstedt JA (1993) Chlorogalum. In ‘The Jepson Manual: Higher Plants of California’. (Ed. JC Hickman) pp. 1189–1190. (University of California Press: Berkeley, CA)

Johnson KA, Morrison DA , Goldsack G (1994) Post-fire flowering patterns in Blandfordia nobilis (Liliaceae). Australian Journal of Botany  42, 49–60.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | Keeley JE (1994) Seed-germination patterns in fire-prone Mediterranean-climate regions. In ‘Ecology and Biogeography of Mediterranean Ecosystems in Chile, California and Australia’. (Eds MTK Arroyo, PH Zedler, MD Fox) pp. 239–273. (Springer-Verlag: New York)

Keeley JE, Davis FW (2007) Chaparral. In ‘Terrestrial Vegetation of California’. (Eds MG Barbour, T Keeler-Wolf, AA Schoenherr) pp. 339–366. (University of California Press: Berkeley, CA)

Keeley JE, Fotheringham CJ , Baer-Keeley M (2005) Determinants of post-fire recovery and succession in Mediterranean-climate shrublands of California. Ecological Applications  15, 1515–1534.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | Sampson AW (1944) Plant succession on burned chaparral lands in northern California. University of California, Agricultural Experiment Station Bulletin Number 635. (Berkeley, CA)

Stone EC (1951) The stimulative effect of fire on the flowering of the golden brodiaea (Brodiaea ixioides Wats. var. lugens Jeps.). Ecology  32, 534–537.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | Whelan RJ (1995) ‘The Ecology of Fire.’ (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK)