Journal
JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE
Volume 12, Issue 2, Pages 261-268Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.2307/3236610
Keywords
fire severity; succession; wildfire
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Changes in disturbance due to fire regime in southwestern Pinus ponderosa forests over the last century have led to dense forests that are threatened by widespread fire. It has been shown in other studies that a pulse of native, early-seral opportunistic species typically follow such disturbance events. With the growing importance of exotic plants in local flora, however, these exotics often fill this opportunistic role in recovery. We report the effects of fire severity on exotic plant species following three widespread fires of 1996 in northern Arizona P. ponderosa forests. Species richness and abundance of all vascular plant species, including exotics, were higher in burned than nearby unburned areas. Exotic species were far more important, in terms of cover, where fire severity was highest. Species present after wildfires include those of the predisturbed forest and new species that could not be predicted from above-ground flora of nearby unburned forests.
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