Fuentes-Ramirez Andres, Veldman Joseph W, Holzapfel Claus, Moloney Kirk A
Laboratorio de Biometria, Departamento de Ciencias Forestales, Universidad de La Frontera, Casilla 54-D, Temuco, Chile.
Department of Ecology, Evolution and Organismal Biology, Iowa State University, 251 Bessey Hall, Ames, Iowa, 50011, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2016 Oct;26(7):2311-2322. doi: 10.1002/eap.1371. Epub 2016 Sep 23.
Novel fire regimes are an important cause and consequence of global environmental change that involve interactions among biotic, climatic, and human components of ecosystems. Plant flammability is key to these interactions, yet few studies directly measure flammability or consider how multiple species with different flammabilities interact to produce novel fire regimes. Deserts of the southwestern United States are an ideal system for exploring how novel fire regimes can emerge when fire-promoting species invade ecosystems comprised of species that did not evolve with fire. In these deserts, exotic annual grasses provide fuel continuity across landscapes that did not historically burn. These fires often ignite a keystone desert shrub, the fire-intolerant creosote bush, Larrea tridentata (DC.) Coville. Ignition of Larrea is likely catalyzed by fuels produced by native plants that grow beneath the shrubs. We hypothesize that invasive and native species exhibit distinct flammability characteristics that in combination determine spatial patterns of fire spread and intensity. We measured flammability metrics of Larrea, two invasive grasses, Schismus arabicus and Bromus madritensis, and two native plants, the sub-shrub Ambrosia dumosa and the annual herb Amsinckia menziesii. Results of laboratory experiments show that the grasses carry fire quickly (1.32 cm/s), but burn for short duration (0.5 min) at low temperatures. In contrast, native plants spread fire slowly (0.12 cm/s), but burn up to eight times longer (4 min) and produced hotter fires. Additional experiments on the ignition requirements of Larrea suggest that native plants burn with sufficient temperature and duration to ignite dead Larrea branches (time to ignition, 2 min; temperature at ignition 692°C). Once burning, these dead branches ignite living branches in the upper portions of the shrub. Our study provides support for a conceptual model in which exotic grasses are "spreaders" of fire and native plants growing beneath shrubs are "igniters" of dead Larrea branches. Once burning, flames produced by dead branches engulf the entire shrub, resulting in locally intense fires without historical precedent in this system. We suggest that fire models and conservation-focused management could be improved by incorporating the distinct flammability characteristics and spatial distributions of spreaders, igniters, and keystone shrubs.
新型火灾模式是全球环境变化的一个重要原因和结果,涉及生态系统中生物、气候和人类要素之间的相互作用。植物可燃性是这些相互作用的关键,但很少有研究直接测量可燃性,或考虑具有不同可燃性的多个物种如何相互作用以产生新型火灾模式。美国西南部的沙漠是一个理想的系统,可用于探索当促进火灾的物种入侵由未与火共同进化的物种组成的生态系统时,新型火灾模式是如何出现的。在这些沙漠中,外来一年生草本植物在历史上未曾发生过火灾的景观中提供了燃料连续性。这些火灾常常会点燃一种关键的沙漠灌木——不耐火的三齿拉瑞阿(Larrea tridentata (DC.) Coville)。拉瑞阿的着火可能是由生长在灌木下方的本地植物产生的燃料催化的。我们假设入侵物种和本地物种表现出不同的可燃性特征,这些特征共同决定了火灾蔓延和强度的空间模式。我们测量了拉瑞阿、两种入侵草本植物阿拉伯裂稃草(Schismus arabicus)和地中海雀麦(Bromus madritensis)以及两种本地植物——亚灌木矮豚草(Ambrosia dumosa)和一年生草本门氏水棘针(Amsinckia menziesii)的可燃性指标。实验室实验结果表明,草本植物火灾蔓延速度快(1.32厘米/秒),但在低温下燃烧持续时间短(0.5分钟)。相比之下,本地植物火灾蔓延速度慢(0.12厘米/秒),但燃烧时间长达八倍(4分钟),且产生的火灾温度更高。关于拉瑞阿着火条件的额外实验表明,本地植物燃烧时的温度和持续时间足以点燃拉瑞阿的枯枝(着火时间为2分钟;着火温度为692°C)。一旦燃烧,这些枯枝会点燃灌木上部的活枝。我们的研究为一个概念模型提供了支持,在该模型中,外来草本植物是火灾的“传播者”,生长在灌木下方的本地植物是拉瑞阿枯枝的“点火者”。一旦燃烧,枯枝产生的火焰会吞没整个灌木,导致在该系统中出现前所未有的局部强烈火灾。我们建议,通过纳入传播者、点火者和关键灌木的不同可燃性特征及空间分布,可以改进火灾模型和以保护为重点的管理。