4.4 Article

Fire-scars and polymodal age-structure provide evidence of fire-events in an Aleppo pine population in southern France

Journal

DENDROCHRONOLOGIA
Volume 31, Issue 3, Pages 159-164

Publisher

ELSEVIER GMBH
DOI: 10.1016/j.dendro.2013.05.001

Keywords

Population dynamics; Regeneration; Tree cohort; Fire scar; Disturbance ecology; Mediterranean forest

Funding

  1. FIREMAN Program (ANR/ERA-net BiodivERsA)

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Aleppo pine (Pious halepensis Mill.) is adapted to fire, the most important disturbance in Mediterranean ecosystems. This species is known to be sensitive to fire and is usually killed when burned, but has a powerful regenerative capacity following burning. Sometimes, however, pines survive within burned areas, suggesting a certain potential for recording fire events in terms of age-structure and eventually scars. In the present study, fire scars on Aleppo pine trunks were used to construct a 150-year fire record in a burned forest in southern France. Four fires were detected with a mean fire return interval of 27 years: minimum 13 years and maximum 45 years. The age structure of the Aleppo pine population was analyzed on the basis of dated fire-scars in order to test the role of fire in creating the polymodal structure of the pine population. Results show the presence of multiple cohorts (subpopulations) of Aleppo pine. There appear to have been several pulses of tree recruitment, with the two largest cohorts corresponding to regeneration after the 1919 and 2000 fires. Other fires were recognized based on fire scars but these were not associated with obvious post-fire pine recruitment. Regeneration success is likely to depend on fire severity and on the length of fire-free intervals. Fire history and associated age-structure can thus be reconstructed using Aleppo pine stands. (C) 2013 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.

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