Department of Geography, Department 3371, 1000 E. University Avenue, University of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyoming 82072, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2013 Apr;23(3):546-64. doi: 10.1890/12-0844.1.
Sagebrush landscapes provide habitat for Sage-Grouse and other sagebrush obligates, yet historical fire regimes and the structure of historical sagebrush landscapes are poorly known, hampering ecological restoration and management. To remedy this, General Land Office Survey (GLO) survey notes were used to reconstruct over two million hectares of historical vegetation for four sagebrush-dominated (Artemisia spp.) study areas in the western United States. Reconstructed vegetation was analyzed for fire indicators used to identify historical fires and reconstruct historical fire regimes. Historical fire-size distributions were inverse-J shaped, and one fire > 100 000 ha was identified. Historical fire rotations were estimated at 171-342 years for Wyoming big sagebrush (A. tridentata ssp. wyomingensis) and 137-217 years for mountain big sagebrush (A. tridentata ssp. vaseyana). Historical fire and patch sizes were significantly larger in Wyoming big sagebrush than mountain big sagebrush, and historical fire rotations were significantly longer in Wyoming big sagebrush than mountain big sagebrush. Historical fire rotations in Wyoming were longer than those in other study areas. Fine-scale mosaics of burned and unburned area and larger unburned inclusions within fire perimeters were less common than in modern fires. Historical sagebrush landscapes were dominated by large, contiguous areas of sagebrush, though large grass-dominated areas and finer-scale mosaics of grass and sagebrush were also present in smaller amounts. Variation in sagebrush density was a common source of patchiness, and areas classified as "dense" made up 24.5% of total sagebrush area, compared to 16.3% for "scattered" sagebrush. Results suggest significant differences in historical and modern fire regimes. Modern fire rotations in Wyoming big sagebrush are shorter than historical fire rotations. Results also suggest that historical sagebrush landscapes would have fluctuated, because of infrequent episodes of large fires and long periods of recovery and maturity. Due to fragmentation of sagebrush landscapes, the large, contiguous expanses of sagebrush that dominated historically are most at risk and in need of conservation, including both dense and scattered sagebrush. Fire suppression in Wyoming big sagebrush may also be advisable, as modern fire rotations are shorter than their historical counterparts.
山艾灌丛景观为山鹑和其他山艾灌丛专性种提供了栖息地,但历史火灾情况和历史山艾灌丛景观结构知之甚少,这阻碍了生态恢复和管理。为了解决这个问题,使用了一般土地办公室调查(GLO)调查记录来重建美国西部四个山艾灌丛占主导地位(Artemisia spp.)研究区域的超过 200 万公顷的历史植被。对重建植被进行了分析,以确定历史火灾和重建历史火灾情况的火灾指标。历史火灾大小分布呈反 J 形,确定了一场超过 10 万公顷的火灾。怀俄明州大山艾灌丛(A. tridentata ssp. wyomingensis)的历史火灾轮距估计为 171-342 年,而山地大山艾灌丛(A. tridentata ssp. vaseyana)的历史火灾轮距估计为 137-217 年。怀俄明州大山艾灌丛的历史火灾和斑块大小明显大于山地大山艾灌丛,而怀俄明州大山艾灌丛的历史火灾轮距明显长于山地大山艾灌丛。怀俄明州的历史火灾轮距长于其他研究区域。与现代火灾相比,燃烧区和未燃烧区的精细镶嵌以及火灾周边较大的未燃烧区镶嵌不太常见。历史山艾灌丛景观主要由大面积的连续山艾灌丛组成,但也存在少量的大面积草地和较小面积的草地与山艾灌丛镶嵌。山艾灌丛密度的变化是斑块化的常见原因,分类为“密集”的区域占山艾灌丛总面积的 24.5%,而分类为“分散”的山艾灌丛占 16.3%。结果表明历史和现代火灾情况存在显著差异。怀俄明州大山艾灌丛的现代火灾轮距短于历史火灾轮距。结果还表明,由于大型火灾的罕见事件和长时间的恢复和成熟,历史山艾灌丛景观会发生波动。由于山艾灌丛景观的破碎化,历史上占主导地位的大面积连续山艾灌丛最有风险,需要保护,包括密集和分散的山艾灌丛。怀俄明州大山艾灌丛的火灾抑制可能也是明智的,因为现代火灾轮距短于历史火灾轮距。