Timing of fire relative to seed development may enable non-serotinous species to recolonize from the aerial seed banks of fire-killed trees

The existence of non-serotinous, non-sprouting species in fire regimes where serotiny confers an adaptive advantage is puzzling, particularly when these species recruit poorly from soil seed banks or from burn edges. In this paper, white spruce (<i>Picea glauca</i> (Moench) Voss) was use...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: S. T. Michaletz, E. A. Johnson, W. E. Mell, D. F. Greene
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2013-07-01
Series:Biogeosciences
Online Access:http://www.biogeosciences.net/10/5061/2013/bg-10-5061-2013.pdf
id doaj-1470dd2620eb427c8f05813048c25ee2
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1470dd2620eb427c8f05813048c25ee22020-11-24T21:43:03ZengCopernicus PublicationsBiogeosciences1726-41701726-41892013-07-011075061507810.5194/bg-10-5061-2013Timing of fire relative to seed development may enable non-serotinous species to recolonize from the aerial seed banks of fire-killed treesS. T. MichaletzE. A. JohnsonW. E. MellD. F. GreeneThe existence of non-serotinous, non-sprouting species in fire regimes where serotiny confers an adaptive advantage is puzzling, particularly when these species recruit poorly from soil seed banks or from burn edges. In this paper, white spruce (<i>Picea glauca</i> (Moench) Voss) was used to show how the timing of fire relative to seed development may permit non-serotinous species to recolonize burned areas from the aerial seed banks of fire-killed trees. To estimate survival of seeds within closed cones during crown fires, cone heating was simulated using a one-dimensional conduction model implemented in a three-dimensional computational fluid dynamics fire behavior model. To quantify the area burned when germinable seed would be contained within closed cones during a mast year, empirical fire occurrence and seed development (germinability and cone opening) data were compared for multiple locations across the white spruce range. Approximately 12% of cones contained viable seed following crown fire simulations (0.072 m s<sup>−1</sup> mean spread rate; 9147 kW m<sup>−1</sup> mean intensity), and roughly half of the historical area burned resulted from fires that occurred when closed cones would contain germinable seed. Together, these results suggest that non-serotinous species may recolonize burned areas from in situ aerial seed banks, and that this may be an important cause of their existence in fire regimes to which they otherwise seem poorly suited.http://www.biogeosciences.net/10/5061/2013/bg-10-5061-2013.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author S. T. Michaletz
E. A. Johnson
W. E. Mell
D. F. Greene
spellingShingle S. T. Michaletz
E. A. Johnson
W. E. Mell
D. F. Greene
Timing of fire relative to seed development may enable non-serotinous species to recolonize from the aerial seed banks of fire-killed trees
Biogeosciences
author_facet S. T. Michaletz
E. A. Johnson
W. E. Mell
D. F. Greene
author_sort S. T. Michaletz
title Timing of fire relative to seed development may enable non-serotinous species to recolonize from the aerial seed banks of fire-killed trees
title_short Timing of fire relative to seed development may enable non-serotinous species to recolonize from the aerial seed banks of fire-killed trees
title_full Timing of fire relative to seed development may enable non-serotinous species to recolonize from the aerial seed banks of fire-killed trees
title_fullStr Timing of fire relative to seed development may enable non-serotinous species to recolonize from the aerial seed banks of fire-killed trees
title_full_unstemmed Timing of fire relative to seed development may enable non-serotinous species to recolonize from the aerial seed banks of fire-killed trees
title_sort timing of fire relative to seed development may enable non-serotinous species to recolonize from the aerial seed banks of fire-killed trees
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Biogeosciences
issn 1726-4170
1726-4189
publishDate 2013-07-01
description The existence of non-serotinous, non-sprouting species in fire regimes where serotiny confers an adaptive advantage is puzzling, particularly when these species recruit poorly from soil seed banks or from burn edges. In this paper, white spruce (<i>Picea glauca</i> (Moench) Voss) was used to show how the timing of fire relative to seed development may permit non-serotinous species to recolonize burned areas from the aerial seed banks of fire-killed trees. To estimate survival of seeds within closed cones during crown fires, cone heating was simulated using a one-dimensional conduction model implemented in a three-dimensional computational fluid dynamics fire behavior model. To quantify the area burned when germinable seed would be contained within closed cones during a mast year, empirical fire occurrence and seed development (germinability and cone opening) data were compared for multiple locations across the white spruce range. Approximately 12% of cones contained viable seed following crown fire simulations (0.072 m s<sup>−1</sup> mean spread rate; 9147 kW m<sup>−1</sup> mean intensity), and roughly half of the historical area burned resulted from fires that occurred when closed cones would contain germinable seed. Together, these results suggest that non-serotinous species may recolonize burned areas from in situ aerial seed banks, and that this may be an important cause of their existence in fire regimes to which they otherwise seem poorly suited.
url http://www.biogeosciences.net/10/5061/2013/bg-10-5061-2013.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT stmichaletz timingoffirerelativetoseeddevelopmentmayenablenonserotinousspeciestorecolonizefromtheaerialseedbanksoffirekilledtrees
AT eajohnson timingoffirerelativetoseeddevelopmentmayenablenonserotinousspeciestorecolonizefromtheaerialseedbanksoffirekilledtrees
AT wemell timingoffirerelativetoseeddevelopmentmayenablenonserotinousspeciestorecolonizefromtheaerialseedbanksoffirekilledtrees
AT dfgreene timingoffirerelativetoseeddevelopmentmayenablenonserotinousspeciestorecolonizefromtheaerialseedbanksoffirekilledtrees
_version_ 1725915728792518656