Fire and the invasive annual grass Microstegium vimineum in eastern deciduous forests
نویسندگان
چکیده
Fire and the invasive annual grass Microstegium vimineum in eastern deciduous forests" (2012). Abstract Non-native plant invasions have the potential to change natural and prescribed fire regimes by increasing fuel loads, continuity of fuels, and fuel composition, which may alter fire intensity, damage native species, and promote further invasions. In this project we sought to evaluate the interaction between fire and the invasive annual grass Microstegium vimineum in eastern deciduous forests. Our goal was to determine if invasions enhance fire intensity, including fire temperatures, flame heights, and fire duration, and negatively affect tree regeneration, and stimulate further invasions. We also sought to determine how prescribed fires and the timing of fires affect the density and demography of Microstegium and we tested the pre and post-fire management options for controlling the post-fire spread of Microstegium invasions. At Big Oaks National Wildlife Refuge in southeastern Indiana, we conducted large-scale prescribed fires to evaluate fire intensity in invaded and uninvaded areas and the response of experimental and naturally regenerating trees. In small-scale plots we manipulated the timing and frequency of fires and applied herbicide treatments to evaluate demographic responses of Microstegium. Our results show that maximum fire temperatures were on average 57% greater in Microstegium-invaded than uninvaded control areas. In addition, fires burned at temperatures over 300 °C for nearly twice as long and flame heights were 98% higher in invaded compared to uninvaded habitats. Microstegium invasion reduced survival of experimental trees by 37% in areas exposed to prescribed fire compared to uninvaded areas and tree survival in invaded, burned plots was 53% lower than invaded, unburned plots. Exposure to prescribed fire increased natural tree regeneration overall but there were 60% and 57% fewer tree seedlings in burned and unburned invaded plots, respectively, compared to control plots with the same treatments. Prescribed fire increased Microstegium biomass by five-fold the following growing season. Experimental spring fires significantly reduced Microstegium seedling numbers by ~75% immediately after the burn, but this did not result in reduced seed production at the end of season or seedling numbers the year following a burn. Burning for two springs in a row similarly reduced seedling numbers during each of the years when the burns were conducted, but this effect did not carry over to reduce Microstegium seedling numbers the following year. Similarly, fall fire reduced seedling numbers by ~50% the following spring, but this reduction also did not result in …
منابع مشابه
Positive feedbacks between fire and non-native grass invasion in temperate deciduous forests
Non-native grass invasions have the potential to change natural and prescribed fire regimes by altering fuels, which in turn may promote further invasion. We examined if invasion by Microstegium vimineum, a non-native annual grass, resulted in a positive invasion-fire feedback in eastern deciduous forests managed with prescribed fire and how this response varied across the landscape. Using pair...
متن کاملA Potential Conflict between Preserving Regional Plant Diversity and Biotic Resistance to an Invasive Grass, Microstegium vimineum
1 Corresponding author: [email protected] ABSTRACT: The relevance of diversity-biotic resistance studies to conservation of biodiversity could be improved by simultaneously examining the drivers of regional diversity and their effects on local species diversity and invasion. Using path analysis, I examined direct and indirect effects of various abiotic factors (i.e., flooding, treefall gaps, ...
متن کاملINVASION NOTE Native, insect herbivore communities derive a significant proportion of their carbon from a widespread invader of forest understories
Research on natural enemies demonstrates the potential for exotic plants to be integrated into foodwebs through the activities of native herbivores. The quantitative importance of exotics as a food resource to herbivores is more difficult to ascertain. In addition, some widespread invaders appear to have minimal herbivore loads. Microstegium vimineum is one example. It is an annual, C4 grass th...
متن کاملQuantifying Microstegium vimineum Seed Movement by Non-Riparian Water Dispersal Using an Ultraviolet-Marking Based Recapture Method
Microstegium vimineum is a shade tolerant annual C4 invasive grass in the Eastern US, which has been shown to negatively impact species diversity and succession in hardwood forests. To date, empirical studies have shown that population expansion is limited to <1 m yr(-1), which is largely driven by gravity dispersal. However, this likely does not fully account for all mechanisms of population-s...
متن کاملHabitat, dispersal and propagule pressure control exotic plant infilling within an invaded range
Deep in the heart of a longstanding invasion, an exotic grass is still invading. Range infilling potentially has the greatest impact on native communities and ecosystem processes, but receives much less attention than range expansion. ‘Snapshot’ studies of invasive plant dispersal, habitat and propagule limitations cannot determine whether a landscape is saturated or whether a species is active...
متن کامل