Department of Geography, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas 77843, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2013 Sep;23(6):1250-66. doi: 10.1890/12-1752.1.
Fire-maintained ecosystems and associated species are becoming increasingly rare in the southern Appalachian Mountains because of fire suppression policies implemented in the early 20th century. Restoration of these communities through prescribed fire has been hindered by a lack of information on historical fire regimes. To characterize past fire regimes, we collected and absolutely dated the tree rings on cross sections from 242 fire-scarred trees at three different sites in the southern Appalachian Mountains of Tennessee and North Carolina. Our objectives were to (1) characterize the historical frequency of fire in southern Appalachian mixed pine-oak forests, (2) assess the impact of interannual climatic variability on the historical occurrence of fire, and (3) determine whether changes in human culture and land use altered the frequency of fire. Results demonstrate that fires burned frequently at all three sites for at least two centuries prior to the implementation of fire suppression and prevention in the early to mid 20th century. Composite mean fire return intervals were 2-4 yr, and point mean fire return intervals were 9-13 yr. Area-wide fires that burned across multiple stands occurred at 6-13-yr intervals. The majority of fires were recorded during the dormant season. Fire occurrence exhibited little relationship with reconstructed annual drought conditions. Also, fire activity did not change markedly during the transition from Native American to Euro-American settlement or during the period of industrial logging at the start of the 20th century. Fire activity declined significantly, however, during the fire suppression period, with a nearly complete absence of fire during recent decades. The characterization of past fire regimes should provide managers with specific targets for restoration of fire-associated communities in the southern Appalachian Mountains. The fire chronologies reported here are among the longest tree-ring reconstructions of fire history compiled for the eastern United States and support the hypothesis that frequent burning has played a long and important role in the development of forests in the southern Appalachian Mountains.
由于 20 世纪初实施的火灾抑制政策,阿巴拉契亚山脉南部的以火维持的生态系统和相关物种变得越来越罕见。通过规定火灾来恢复这些群落受到缺乏历史火灾制度信息的阻碍。为了描述过去的火灾制度,我们在田纳西州和北卡罗来纳州阿巴拉契亚山脉南部的三个不同地点收集并绝对确定了 242 棵有火灾痕迹的树木的横截面的树轮。我们的目标是:(1) 描述阿巴拉契亚混合松-橡树林历史火灾的频率;(2) 评估年际气候变异性对历史火灾发生的影响;(3) 确定人类文化和土地利用的变化是否改变了火灾的频率。结果表明,在 20 世纪初至中期实施火灾抑制和预防之前,所有三个地点的火灾至少在两个世纪前就频繁发生。复合平均火灾回归间隔为 2-4 年,点平均火灾回归间隔为 9-13 年。跨多个林分发生的大面积火灾间隔 6-13 年。大多数火灾发生在休眠期。火灾发生与重建的年干旱条件关系不大。此外,在从美洲原住民到欧洲裔美国人定居或在 20 世纪初工业伐木开始的时期,火灾活动没有明显变化。然而,火灾活动在火灾抑制期间显著下降,最近几十年几乎完全没有火灾。过去火灾制度的特征应该为管理者提供在阿巴拉契亚山脉南部恢复与火灾相关的群落的具体目标。这里报告的火灾年表是为美国东部编制的最长的火灾历史树木年轮重建之一,支持频繁燃烧在阿巴拉契亚山脉南部森林发育中发挥了长期而重要作用的假设。