Department of Geography, San Diego State University, 5500 Campanile Drive, San Diego, CA 92182, United States of America.
Bren School of Environmental Science and Management, University of California-Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA 93106, United States of America.
Sci Total Environ. 2021 Jan 10;751:142271. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.142271. Epub 2020 Sep 11.
Regrowth after fire is critical to the persistence of chaparral shrub communities in southern California, which has been subject to frequent fire events in recent decades. Fires that recur at short intervals of 10 years or less have been considered an inhibitor of recovery and the major cause of 'community type-conversion' in chaparral, primarily based on studies of small extents and limited time periods. However, recent sub-regional investigations based on remote sensing suggest that short-interval fire (SIF) does not have ubiquitous impact on postfire chaparral recovery. A region-wide analysis including a greater spatial extent and time period is needed to better understand SIF impact on chaparral. This study evaluates patterns of postfire recovery across southern California, based on temporal trajectories of Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) derived from June-solstice Landsat image series covering the period 1984-2018. High spatial resolution aerial images were used to calibrate Landsat NDVI trajectory-based estimates of change in fractional shrub cover (dFSC) for 294 stands. The objectives of this study were (1) to assess effects of time between fires and number of burns on recovery, using stand-aggregate samples (n = 294) and paired single- and multiple-burn sample plots (n = 528), and (2) to explain recovery variations among predominant single-burn locations based on shrub community type, climate, soils, and terrain. Stand-aggregate samples showed a significant but weak effect of SIF on recovery (p < 0.001; R = 0.003). Results from paired sample plots showed no significant effect of SIF on dFSC among twice-burned sites, although recovery was diminished due to SIF at sites that burned three times within 25 years. Multiple linear regression showed that annual precipitation and temperature, chaparral community type, and edaphic variables explain 28% of regional variation in recovery of once-burned sites. Many stands that exhibited poor recovery had burned only once and consist of xeric, desert-fringe chamise in soils of low clay content.
火后再生对南加州的矮灌丛群落的持续存在至关重要,南加州在最近几十年中经历了频繁的火灾事件。那些间隔不到 10 年的短时间复发的火灾被认为是恢复的抑制剂,也是矮灌丛“群落类型转换”的主要原因,这主要基于对小范围和有限时间段的研究。然而,最近基于遥感的次区域调查表明,短间隔火灾(SIF)对火后矮灌丛恢复没有普遍的影响。需要进行更大空间范围和更长时间周期的区域范围分析,以更好地了解 SIF 对矮灌丛的影响。本研究基于 1984-2018 年 6 月至日 Landsat 图像序列得出的归一化差异植被指数(NDVI)的时间轨迹,评估了南加州火后恢复的模式。高空间分辨率航空图像用于校准 Landsat NDVI 轨迹基变化估算的分数灌木覆盖(dFSC),共校准了 294 个样地。本研究的目的是:(1)使用样地聚合样本(n=294)和单火和多火样地对(n=528),评估火灾之间的时间间隔和燃烧次数对恢复的影响;(2)根据灌木群落类型、气候、土壤和地形,解释主要单火地点之间的恢复差异。样地聚合样本显示 SIF 对恢复有显著但较弱的影响(p<0.001;R=0.003)。样地对样本的结果表明,在两次燃烧的地点,SIF 对 dFSC 没有显著影响,尽管在 25 年内三次燃烧的地点,由于 SIF 而导致恢复减少。多元线性回归表明,年降水量和温度、矮灌丛群落类型和土壤变量解释了一次燃烧地点恢复的 28%的区域差异。许多恢复较差的样地仅燃烧过一次,且位于土壤粘土含量低的干旱、沙漠边缘的腺枝石楠中。