Effects of fire season on flowering of forbs and shrubs in longleaf pine forests
- 1 August 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Oecologia
- Vol. 76 (3) , 353-363
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00377029
Abstract
Effects of variation in fire season on flowering of forbs and shrubs were studied experimentally in two longleaf pine forest habitats in northern Florida, USA. Large, replicated plots were burned at different times of the year, and flowering on each plot was measured over the twelve months following fire. While fire season had little effect on the number of species flowering during the year following fire, fires during the growing season decreased average flowering duration per species and increased synchronization of peak flowering times within species relative to fires between growing seasons. Fires during the growing season also increased the dominance of fall flowering forbs and delayed peak fall flowering. Differences in flowering resulting from variation in fire season were related to seasonal changes in the morphology of clonal forbs, especially fall-flowering composites. Community level differences in flowering phenologies indicated that timing of fire relative to environmental cues that induced flowering was important in determining flowering synchrony among species within the ground cover of longleaf pine forests. Differences in fire season produced qualitatively similar effects on flowering phenologies in both habitats, indicating plant responses to variation in the timing of fires were not habitat specific.Keywords
This publication has 49 references indexed in Scilit:
- Relationships among Flowering Phenology, Insect Visitors, and Seed‐Set of Individuals: Experimental Studies on Four Co‐occurring Species of Goldenrod (Solidago: Compositae)Ecological Monographs, 1983
- Competition for Bumblebee Pollinators in Rocky Mountain Plant CommunitiesEcology, 1980
- Regularity, Randomness, and Aggregation in Flowering PhenologiesScience, 1979
- Flowering Ecology of Some Spring Woodland HerbsEcology, 1978
- Coadapted Competitors: The Flowering Seasons of Hummingbird-Pollinated Plants in a Tropical ForestScience, 1977
- The Colonization and Formation of Equilibrium Plant Species Associations on Badger Disturbances in a Tall‐Grass PrairieEcological Monographs, 1975
- Effects of burning and clipping on temperature, growth, and flowering of narrow-leaved snow tussockNew Zealand Journal of Botany, 1970
- Ecology of Fire in GrasslandsPublished by Elsevier ,1968
- Measurement of DiversityNature, 1949
- The Vegetation and Habitat Factors of the Coarser Sands of the North Carolina Coastal Plain: An Ecological StudyEcological Monographs, 1931