Soil temperatures and seed burial in relation to the performance of Heteropogon contortus and Themeda australis in burnt native woodland pastures in Eastern Queensland
Australian Journal of Botany
17(2) 269 - 275
Published: 1969
Abstract
The factors underlying the increasing dominance of Heteropogon contortus (bunch or black spear grass) as a result of regularly burning native pastures in eastern Queensland have been investigated. In the subtropical environment of this experiment the removal of ground cover by burning or other means significantly increased the average maximum temperature of the surface soil. Burning favoured the germination of buried H. contortus seed at a time when ambient temperatures were too low for this to occur in unburnt situations. In late seasons and in the seasonally dry tropics insufficient soil moisture would tend to limit growth and germination until ambient temperatures are high, in which case the burning effect would be less pronounced.
The efficient seed burial mechanism of H. contortus places it at an establishment advantage over other commonly associated species such as blue grasses (Bothriochloa, Dichanthium) and others whose seeds remain largely in the surface litter. Fire destroys much of this litter, the microhabitat for seed germination at ground level, and some of the weaker perennial plants.
The implications of these results in relation to the increased dominance of either H. contortus or Themeda australis (kangaroo grass) are discussed.
https://doi.org/10.1071/BT9690269
© CSIRO 1969