Effects of variation in fire intensity on regeneration of co-occurring species of small trees in the Sydney region
David A. Morrison and John A. Renwick
Australian Journal of Botany
48(1) 71 - 79
Published: 2000
Abstract
Fire is a common source of change for the plant species of Mediterranean-type ecosystems, but little is known about the comparative effects of different fire intensities. Accordingly, nine species of small tree (Acacia binervia, Acacia implexa, Acacia parramattensis, Casuarina littoralis, Casuarina torulosa, Hakea sericea, Jacksonia scoparia, Leptospermum trinervium, Persoonia linearis) were studied 1 year after each of two low-intensity prescribed fires and a high-intensity wildfire at a site in the outer western region of the Sydney metropolitan area, south-eastern Australia. All of the species except H. sericea proved to be at least partly tolerant of the low-intensity fires (40–80% of their stems surviving the fires), but only C. torulosa, L. trinervium and P. linearis were tolerant of the high-intensity fire (20–30% stem survival). All of the fire-tolerant species had more of their smaller stems killed by the fires, and the high-intensity fire killed larger stems than did the low-intensity-fires. The size of surviving stems was related to the fire-tolerance characteristics for these species, specifically the presence or absence of insulating bark and epicormic or lignotuberous buds, as well as stem height (preventing 100% leaf-scorch). Those species with post-fire shoots at the stem base produced them when the upper part of the stem had been killed, with variable response to the fire intensities in the number of shoots produced. Those species with post-fire epicormic shoots produced them if the stem was alive post-fire, usually with fewer shoots produced after the high-intensity than the low-intensity fire. The number of shoots produced was positively related to the size of the stem for both fire intensities. These different sets of responses to the fire intensities have important implications for the ability to predict community responses to fire based on the study of only a few species, as well for the long-term effects of prescribing a particular fire regime.https://doi.org/10.1071/BT98054
© CSIRO 2000