4.4 Article

Impacts of increasing fine fuel loads on acorn germination and early growth of oak seedlings

Journal

FIRE ECOLOGY
Volume 17, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1186/s42408-020-00088-8

Keywords

burn; leaf litter; prescribed fire; Quercus alba; Quercus shumardii; Shumard oak; white oak

Funding

  1. National Institution of Food and Agriculture, US Department of Agriculture (NIFA-USDA) McIntire Stennis Capacity Grant [MISZ-069450]
  2. Mississippi State University (MSU) Office of Research and Economic Development Undergraduate Research Program
  3. MSU College of Forest Resources Undergraduate Research Scholars Program

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The study found that lower fine fuel loads helped increase acorn germination rates and seedling growth for both white oak and Shumard oak. Seedlings originating from burned acorns were slightly shorter, but overall growth patterns were similar to those from unburned acorns.
Background Prescribed fire is increasingly used to restore and maintain upland oak (Quercus L. spp.) ecosystems in the central and eastern US. However, little is known about how prescribed fire affects recently fallen acorns under different fine fuel loads, which can vary with stand composition and basal area, burn season, and fire frequency. We conducted plot-level (1 m(2)) burns in an upland oak stand in northern Mississippi, USA, during December 2018, using single (i.e., ambient), double, and triple fine fuel loads, representative of those in nearby unburned and recently fire-treated, closed-canopy stands. Pre burn, we placed 30 acorns each of white oak (Quercus alba L.) and Shumard oak (Quercus shumardii Buckley) similar to 1 cm below the litter surface in five plots of each fuel treatment. Immediately post burn, we planted unburned and burned acorns in a greenhouse. After similar to 50% of each species' unburned acorns germinated, we measured percent germination and height, basal diameter, and leaf number of germinating seedlings weekly for 11 weeks. Then, we harvested seedlings to determine above- and belowground biomass. Results The single fuel treatment reduced acorn germination rates of both species to similar to 40% compared to similar to 88% in unburned acorns. When burned in double and triple fuel loads, acorns of both species had a <5% germination rate. There was no difference in basal diameter, leaf number, or biomass of seedlings from burned versus unburned acorns for either species. However, seedlings originating from burned acorns of both species were similar to 11% shorter than those from unburned acorns. Thus, both species responded similarly to fuel load treatments. Conclusions Acorns of both species exhibited greater survival with lower fine fuel loads, and consequently lower percent fuel consumption. Acorns germinating post fire generally produced seedlings with growth patterns similar to seedlings originating from unburned acorns. These findings indicate that regular, repeated prescribed fires or canopy reductions that limit fine fuel accumulation and create heterogeneous fuel beds are likely to increase acorn germination rates relative to unburned sites or those with recently introduced fire.

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