4.4 Article

Drivers of understory plant communities in Sierra Nevada mixed conifer forests with pyrodiversity

Journal

FIRE ECOLOGY
Volume 17, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1186/s42408-021-00111-6

Keywords

Biodiversity; Frequent fire; Restoration; Sierra Nevada

Funding

  1. US Joint Fire Science Program
  2. UC Agriculture and Natural Resources Program

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The study found that understory plant communities were influenced by a combination of environmental factors, recent fire history at the plot scale, and pyrodiversity within 50 meters. Canopy cover was inversely related to understory plant cover, Simpson's diversity, and evenness. Species richness was strongly influenced by the interaction of plot-based fire experience and plot-neighborhood pyrodiversity within 50 meters.
Background Fire suppression in western North America increased and homogenized overstory cover in conifer forests, which likely affected understory plant communities. We sought to characterize understory plant communities and their drivers using plot-based observations from two contemporary reference sites in the Sierra Nevada, USA. These sites had long-established natural fire programs, which have resulted in restored natural fire regimes. In this study, we investigated how pyrodiversity-the diversity of fire size, severity, season, and frequency-and other environment factors influenced species composition and cover of forest understory plant communities. Results Understory plant communities were influenced by a combination of environmental, plot-scale recent fire history, and plot-neighborhood pyrodiversity within 50 m. Canopy cover was inversely proportional to understory plant cover, Simpson's diversity, and evenness. Species richness was strongly influenced by the interaction of plot-based fire experience and plot-neighborhood pyrodiversity within 50 m. Conclusions Pyrodiversity appears to contribute both directly and indirectly to diverse understory plant communities in Sierra Nevada mixed conifer forests. The indirect influence is mediated through variability in tree canopy cover, which is partially related to variation in fire severity, while direct influence is an interaction between local and neighborhood fire activity.

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