4.7 Article

Do cone age and heating mode determine the opening of serotinous cones during wildfires? A new bench scale approach applied to Pinus halepensis Mill.

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 763, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.144222

Keywords

Crown fires; Fire traits; Flammability; Mass Loss Calorimeter; Seed dispersal; Surface fires

Funding

  1. Spanish RD projects [RIA2017-00042-005-01, RTI2018094691-B-C32]
  2. EU through the FEDER program

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This study investigates the effects of radiation and flame on the opening and seed release of serotinous cones for the first time, revealing a threshold of 25-30 kW m(-2) for cone opening. Results show that heating mode, cone age, and ignition significantly affect cone opening, with ignition boosting the efficacy of opening and seed release.
Serotiny is a well-known fire adaptive trait in some species, as the Mediterranean conifer Nuts halepensis. However, information about cone opening mechanisms during wildfires and consequences on post fire dispersal is scarce. In addition, standardized methods allowing a realistic simulation of heating modes at bench-scale are not available. In this study, we address for the first time the interacting effects of radiation convection and direct flame on the opening and seed release of serotinous cones, following a novel repeatable methodology. Using a Mass Loss Calorimeter (MLC) device and a wide range of heat exposures (between 5 and 75 kW m(-2)) with Of without ignition, we intended to simulate realistic cone heating during surface and crown fires in laboratory conditions. Additionally, we included the effect of contrasting serotinous cone ages interacting with heating mode and considering the random individual variation. The proposed methodology has shown a high potential to simulate the complex process of crown fires in relation to cone opening under controlled conditions, detecting a threshold of heat exposure (25-30 kW m(-2)) for cone opening. We confirmed that heating mode had a highly significant effect in cone opening, interacting with cone age, while cone age effect on its own was marginal Particularly, ignition significantly increased the efficacy of cone opening and seed release. Moreover, young and old cones behave differently in seed release, both in surface and crown fire simulations. Implementing and adjusting this methodology in other species will allow more realistic and reliable quantitative comparisons than previously attained. (C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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