Meng Ran, Dennison Philip E, D'Antonio Carla M, Moritz Max A
Department of Geography, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, United States of America.
Department of Ecology, Evolution and Marine Biology, University of California Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Oct 22;9(10):e110637. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0110637. eCollection 2014.
Increased fire frequency has been shown to promote alien plant invasions in the western United States, resulting in persistent vegetation type change. Short interval fires are widely considered to be detrimental to reestablishment of shrub species in southern California chaparral, facilitating the invasion of exotic annuals and producing "type conversion". However, supporting evidence for type conversion has largely been at local, site scales and over short post-fire time scales. Type conversion has not been shown to be persistent or widespread in chaparral, and past range improvement studies present evidence that chaparral type conversion may be difficult and a relatively rare phenomenon across the landscape. With the aid of remote sensing data covering coastal southern California and a historical wildfire dataset, the effects of short interval fires (<8 years) on chaparral recovery were evaluated by comparing areas that burned twice to adjacent areas burned only once. Twelve pairs of once- and twice-burned areas were compared using normalized burn ratio (NBR) distributions. Correlations between measures of recovery and explanatory factors (fire history, climate and elevation) were analyzed by linear regression. Reduced vegetation cover was found in some lower elevation areas that were burned twice in short interval fires, where non-sprouting species are more common. However, extensive type conversion of chaparral to grassland was not evident in this study. Most variables, with the exception of elevation, were moderately or poorly correlated with differences in vegetation recovery.
研究表明,火灾频率增加会促进外来植物在美国西部的入侵,导致植被类型持续改变。短间隔火灾被广泛认为不利于南加州丛林灌木物种的重新建立,会促使外来一年生植物入侵并产生“类型转换”。然而,支持类型转换的证据大多来自局部地点尺度以及火灾后的短时间尺度。类型转换在丛林中尚未被证明具有持续性或普遍性,过去的范围改善研究表明,丛林类型转换可能很困难,并且在整个景观中是相对罕见的现象。借助覆盖南加州沿海地区的遥感数据和历史野火数据集,通过比较燃烧两次的区域与仅燃烧一次的相邻区域,评估了短间隔火灾(<8年)对丛林恢复的影响。使用归一化燃烧比(NBR)分布比较了12对一次燃烧和两次燃烧的区域。通过线性回归分析了恢复指标与解释因素(火灾历史、气候和海拔)之间的相关性。在一些低海拔地区,短间隔火灾中燃烧两次的地方发现植被覆盖减少,这些地方非萌蘖物种更为常见。然而,在本研究中,丛林向草地的广泛类型转换并不明显。除海拔外,大多数变量与植被恢复差异的相关性为中等或较弱。