4.7 Article

Early post-fire regeneration of a fire-prone subtropical mixed Yunnan pine forest in Southwest China: Effects of pre-fire vegetation, fire severity and topographic factors

Journal

FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
Volume 356, Issue -, Pages 31-40

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.foreco.2015.06.016

Keywords

Yunnan pine forest; Post-fire regeneration; Fire severity; Pre-fire community; Topography; Regeneration density; Species composition; Random forest analysis

Categories

Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of China [41371190, 31321061]

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Early stages of post-fire regeneration are sensitive to various factors, and can provide critical information for understanding forest responses to fire disturbance and projecting subsequent forest dynamics. Yunnan pine forests are the most widespread conifer forest type in Southwest China, and are frequently threatened by fire disturbance. Post-fire regeneration of this forest type, however, has not been previously studied. In this study, we investigated the early post-fire regeneration in mixed Yunnan pine forests five months after a severe burn in 2013 on Mt. Qinglongling, Yunnan Province, China. We found very active post-fire regeneration in the burned area likely facilitated by ample summer rainfall, with an average regeneration density of similar to 10(5) stems ha(-1). Species composition of the post-fire regeneration was highly similar to the pre-fire community-the similarity between the pre- and post-fire communities was 0.530 +/- 0.222. Elevation, pre-fire community type, and slope position were the three primary factors in the variations in regeneration density and species composition, while the impact of fire severity was low. The regeneration density of Pinus species and evergreen broadleaf species showed contrasting patterns across the environmental gradients, and the results implied that Yunnan forests are generally resilient to fire disturbance. The controlling impacts of the pre-fire community on post-fire regeneration are driven by the efficient regenerating strategies of dominant species, and are a comprehensive reflection of habitat conditions, which are primarily mediated by topographic features. Species regeneration strategies and the high resilience of the community to fire disturbance should be taken into account in fire prevention and management approaches for this forest type. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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