Demographic structure of California chaparral in the long‐term absence of fire
- 24 February 1992
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Vegetation Science
- Vol. 3 (1) , 79-90
- https://doi.org/10.2307/3236001
Abstract
Demographic structure of 12 chaparral sites unburned for 56 to 120 years was investigated. All sites were dominated by vigorous shrub populations and, although there was colonization by seedlings of woodland tree species in several stands, successional replacement of chaparral was not imminent. Although successional changes in community composition were evident, there was no indication of a decline in species diversity. Non‐sprouting species of Ceanothus suffered the greatest mortality at most, but not all, sites. Sprouting shrubs, such as Quercus and Heteromeles had very little mortality, even in stands more than a century old. All postfire resprouting species had multiple stems of different ages indicating these shrubs were capable of continuously regenerating their canopy from basal sprouts. Ceanothus populations were highly clumped and there was a significant correlation across all sites between variance/mean ratio and percentage mortality. As Ceanothus populations thinned, they became less clumped. In mixed chaparral stands, Quercus and Heteromeles were significantly taller than associated Ceanothus shrubs and overtopped the Ceanothus; at two sites, the density of live Quercus per plot was correlated with the density of dead Ceanothus. Thus, mortality of Ceanothus stems is likely related to both intra and interspecific interations.Seedling recruitment was observed for most shrub species that regenerate after fire by resprouting; seedling and sapling densities ranging from 1000–36 500 ha‐1 were recorded for Quercus dumosa, Rhamnus crocea, Prunus ilicifolia, Heteromeles arbutifolia and Cercocarpus betuloides. For all but the last species, seedlings and saplings were most abundant beneath the canopy cover and not in gaps. Across all sites, recruitment was significantly correlated with depth and bio‐mass of the litter layer. Cercocarpus betuloides was present in several stands, but seedling establishment was found only in one very open, disturbed stand. Regardless of stand age, taxa such as Adenostoma, Arctostaphylos and Ceanothus, which recruit seedlings after fire, had no significant seedling production.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Prescribed Burning in California Wildlands Vegetation ManagementPublished by University of California Press ,1989
- Biomass, nitrogen, and phosphorus accumulation over a southern California fire cycle chronosequencePublished by Springer Nature ,1987
- Ecological Wood Anatomy of the Woody Southern Californian FloraIAWA Journal, 1985
- The Microbial Origin of the Allelopathic Potential of Adenostoma fasciculatum H & AEcological Monographs, 1981
- Nutrient Cycling in Mediterranean Type EcosystemsPublished by Springer Nature ,1981
- Age States of Plants of Various Growth Forms: A ReviewJournal of Ecology, 1980
- Effects of Fire on Factors Controlling Plant Growth in Adenostoma ChaparralEcological Monographs, 1975
- Succession after Fire in the Chaparral of Southern CaliforniaEcological Monographs, 1971
- Vegetation types of the San Bernardino Mountains /Published by Smithsonian Institution ,1960
- Development of Vegetation after Fire in the Chamise Chaparral of Southern CaliforniaEcology, 1955