Climate and fire impacts on tree recruitment in mixed conifer forests in northwestern Mexico and California

Author:

Stephens Scott L.1,Steel Zachary L.12,Collins Brandon M.13,Fry Danny L.1,Gill Samantha J.4,Rivera‐Huerta Hiram5,Skinner Carl N.6

Affiliation:

1. Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management University of California, Berkeley Berkeley California USA

2. USDA Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station Fort Collins Colorado USA

3. Center for Fire Research and Outreach University of California, Berkeley Berkeley California USA

4. Natural Resources Management and Bioresource and Agricultural Engineering Departments California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo California USA

5. Facultad de Ciencias Marinas Universidad Autonoma de Baja California Ensenada Mexico

6. USDA Forest Service, Pacific Southwest Research Station Redding California USA

Abstract

AbstractFrequent‐fire forests were once heterogeneous at multiple spatial scales, which contributed to their resilience to severe fire. While many studies have characterized historical spatial patterns in frequent‐fire forests, fewer studies have investigated their temporal dynamics. We investigated the influences of fire and climate on the timing of conifer recruitment in old‐growth Jeffrey pine‐mixed conifer forests in the Sierra San Pedro Martir (SSPM) and the eastern slope of the Sierra Nevada. Additionally, we evaluated the impacts of fire exclusion and recent climate change on recruitment levels using statistical models with realized as well as fire suppression and climate change‐free counterfactual scenarios. Excessive soil drying from anthropogenic climate change resulted in diminished recruitment in the SSPM but not in the Sierra Nevada. Longer fire‐free intervals attributable to fire suppression and exclusion resulted in greater rates of recruitment across all sites but was particularly pronounced in the Sierra Nevada, where suppression began >100 years ago and recruitment was 28 times higher than the historical fire return interval scenario. This demonstrates the profound impact of fire's removal on tree recruitment in Sierra Nevada forests even in the context of recent climate change. Tree recruitment at the SSPM coincided with the early‐20th‐century North American pluvial, as well as a fire‐quiescent period in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Episodic recruitment occurred in the SSPM with no “average” recruitment over the last three centuries. We found that temporal heterogeneity, in conjunction with spatial heterogeneity, are critical components of frequent‐fire‐adapted forests. Episodic recruitment could be a desirable characteristic of frequent‐fire‐adapted forests, and this might be more amenable to climate change impacts that forecast more variable precipitation patterns in the future. One key to this outcome would be for frequent fire to continue to shape these forests versus continued emphasis on fire suppression in California.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology

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