Affiliation:
1. Nelson Mandela University
2. African Centre for Coastal Palaeoscience
Abstract
Abstract
Aim: The expansion of subtropical thicket vegetation at the expense of more species-rich, fire-prone fynbos, potentially due to lower frequency and severity of fire and browsing, is a concern in many coastal dune landscapes of the Cape Floristic Region (CFR) where these two vegetation types co-occur. We were interested in the effects of severe fire and browsing treatment on the vigour of post-fire resprouts of dune thicket shrubs.
Location: Cape St Francis, CFR, South Africa.
Methods: We used an in-situ experimental approach to compare the effects of simulated fire and browsing by herbivores on mortality, resprouting vigour and resprouting rate of ten canopy-forming dune thicket shrub species from different architectural guilds, five years after a previous severe wildfire.
Results: Survival was significantly lower after fire (85%) than after browsing (95%), and was significantly positively related to pre-treatment shrub size. All measures of resprouting vigour were significantly lower after fire than after browsing, and were significantly positively related to pre-treatment size. Resprouting rate was significantly lower after fire than after browsing, and was significantly positively affected by pre-treatment size. Survival and measures of resprouting vigour were generally decoupled from architectural guild and species identity.
Conclusion: Dune thicket shrubs showed high survival after both fire and browsing treatments, suggesting that these species are resilient to frequent, severe defoliation disturbances. Our results suggest that short interval fires (5-15 years) of high severity will merely maintain the co-occurrence of dune fynbos and thicket vegetation by setting back thicket growth rather than causing large-scale mortality of thicket shrubs.
Publisher
Research Square Platform LLC
Reference93 articles.
1. Allison PD(1995) Survival Analysis Using the SAS System: A Practical Guide. SAS Institute, Cary, North Carolina.
2. Allison PD(2010) Survival analysis, in: Hancock, GR, Mueller RO (Eds.), Reviewer’s Guide to Quantitative Methods in the Social Sciences. Routledge, New York.
3. Growing tall vs growing wide: Tree architecture and allometry of Acacia karroo in forest, savanna, and arid environments;Archibald S;Oikos,2003
4. Bates DM (2010) lme4: mixed-effects modelling with R. 470–474. Available at http://lme4.r-forge.rproject.org/book/.
5. Resprouting as a life history strategy in woody plant communities;Bellingham PJ;Oikos,2000