4.5 Article

The post-fire response of an obligate seeding Triodia species (Poaceae) in the fire-prone Kimberley, north-west Australia

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WILDLAND FIRE
Volume 20, Issue 8, Pages 974-981

Publisher

CSIRO PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1071/WF10130

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Funding

  1. Australian Wildlife Conservancy
  2. Australian Research Council
  3. Holsworth Wildlife Research Endowment
  4. Stuart Leslie Bird Research Award
  5. Northern Territory Innovation Board
  6. Wildlife Preservation Society

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Triodia spp. have been described as behaving functionally as a shrub because above ground biomass accumulates slowly over time culminating as the dominant vegetation layer. When combined with high flammability, little seed dormancy and conflicting evidence for fire induced seed germination, obligate seeding species may be more vulnerable to short fire intervals than resprouting species. This study investigated the post-fire regeneration response of the obligate seeder Triodia sp. nov. (aff. T. schinzii Henrard) in the fire prone Kimberley, Western Australia. Adult plants were destroyed by fire in experimental plots to assess the degree of regeneration from either resprouting or germination from seed due to fire. To control for the removal of adults, without fire, plants were pulled out by hand in replicate plots. Germination of Triodia sp. nov. seed from the soil seed bank was strongly induced by fire. Establishment and survival of seedlings through the first dry season was high with a small proportion of individuals flowering at this time. It is concluded that Triodia sp. nov. is resilient to the short fire intervals experienced in the Kimberley where it is a successful localised species.

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