| Literature DB >> 24498383 |
Dennis C Odion1, Chad T Hanson2, André Arsenault3, William L Baker4, Dominick A Dellasala5, Richard L Hutto6, Walt Klenner7, Max A Moritz8, Rosemary L Sherriff9, Thomas T Veblen10, Mark A Williams4.
Abstract
There is widespread concern that fire exclusion has led to an unprecedented threat of uncharacteristically severe fires in ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa Dougl. ex. Laws) and mixed-conifer forests of western North America. These extensive montane forests are considered to be adapted to a low/moderate-severity fire regime that maintained stands of relatively old trees. However, there is increasing recognition from landscape-scale assessments that, prior to any significant effects of fire exclusion, fires and forest structure were more variable in these forests. Biota in these forests are also dependent on the resources made available by higher-severity fire. A better understanding of historical fire regimes in the ponderosa pine and mixed-conifer forests of western North America is therefore needed to define reference conditions and help maintain characteristic ecological diversity of these systems. We compiled landscape-scale evidence of historical fire severity patterns in the ponderosa pine and mixed-conifer forests from published literature sources and stand ages available from the Forest Inventory and Analysis program in the USA. The consensus from this evidence is that the traditional reference conditions of low-severity fire regimes are inaccurate for most forests of western North America. Instead, most forests appear to have been characterized by mixed-severity fire that included ecologically significant amounts of weather-driven, high-severity fire. Diverse forests in different stages of succession, with a high proportion in relatively young stages, occurred prior to fire exclusion. Over the past century, successional diversity created by fire decreased. Our findings suggest that ecological management goals that incorporate successional diversity created by fire may support characteristic biodiversity, whereas current attempts to "restore" forests to open, low-severity fire conditions may not align with historical reference conditions in most ponderosa pine and mixed-conifer forests of western North America.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24498383 PMCID: PMC3912150 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0087852
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Definitions of terms as used in this paper.
| Term | Definition |
| Ponderosa pine andmixed-conifer forests ofWestern North America | Low- to mid-elevation, montane, non-coastal forests of western North America where a regime of low/moderate-severity fire (see |
| Fire dependent | Biota that occur most abundantly after high-severity fire, and which are largely or entirely absent where high-severity fire has not occurred for a long period. |
| Fire regime | The frequency, size, seasonality, impacts and other characteristics of naturally occurring fires that have occurred in a vegetation type over its lifespan, generally 1–3 millennia |
| High-severity fire rotation (or moderate to high-severity fire rotation) | The length of time required for an area equal to the area of interest to burn |
| High-severity fire | Fire that burns on the ground surface, and typically in the overstory canopy (crown fire) as well. Mortality of woody species as measured by basal area is generally >70%. However, sprouting canopy species, such as oaks ( |
| Low-severity fire | Fire that burns on the ground surface such that relatively little or no mortality of live, standing vegetation occurs. Mortality of woody species as measured by basal area is 0–20%, but is mostly 0–5%. See |
| Moderate-severity fire | Fire that burns only on the ground surface and that has effects that are intermediate between low- and high-severity fire as defined here. Mortality of woody species as measured by basal area is generally 20–70% within a given area. |
| Mixed-severity fire | Fire that includes low-, moderate-, and high-severity effects. See |
| Park-like forest | A forest of widely-spaced live, mature trees and very few, if any, dead trees (snags). The understory is open, often dominated by bunchgrasses, and is mostly lacking woody plants. |
| Stand age | The age within a stand of the dominant overstory canopy vegetation that recruited more or less as a cohort, typically after a previous disturbance. |
These terms may have different meanings in the literature depending on the context in which they are used.
Characteristics of fire regimes in ponderosa pine and mixed-conifer forests of Western North America.
| Low/moderate-severity model | Mixed-severity model | |
| Tree populations | 1. Stable. Gap phase recruitment dynamics. | 1. Unstable. Gap and stand-level mortality and recruitment. Stand-replacement fires at intervals often shorter than tree lifespans. |
| 2. Recruitment limited by frequent fire. | 2. Recruitment abundant and stimulated by fire. | |
| 3. Resistant to fire (though oftendescribed as “fire-resilient”). | 3. Resilient following fire. | |
| Landscape patterns | 1. Successional diversity low. | 1. Successional diversity high. |
| 2. Gradual variation alongenvironmental gradients. | 2. Variation along environmental gradients interrupted by sharp boundaries and patchiness. | |
| 3. Low contrast heterogeneity.Intensity/complexity ofspatial pattern is low. | 3. High contrast spatial heterogeneity. Intensity/complexity of spatial pattern is high. | |
| 4. Low beta diversity. | 4. High beta diversity. | |
| Stand structure | 1. Does not vary markedly over time. | 1. Varies markedly as a function of time since fire disturbance. |
| 2. Open canopy of mature, medium andlarge trees; density low. | 2. Variable canopy, tree size, and density variable; even-aged cohorts stimulated by fire. | |
| 3. Understory with few trees or shrubs. | 3. Understory varies. | |
| Fire behavior | 1. Typically low intensity surface firewith flame lengths <3 m;short residence time. | 1. Variable intensity surface or crown fire, variable residence time. |
| 2. Fuel limited. Crown fire cannot initiate. | 2. Not necessarily fuel limited. Crown fire can initiate under extreme conditions. | |
| Individual firecanopy mortality | 1. Mortality of canopy trees <20% by basal area. | 1. Mix of low-, intermediate- and high-severity fire with (0–20%, 20–70%, >70%) mortality of canopy trees by basal area respectively. |
| Interactive effects of fire on fuels and forest flammability | 1. Fires continuously limit fuels and fire sensitive trees. | 1. Fires only temporarily lower fuels. |
| 2. Maintain low flammability and forestmortality over time. | 2. Do not maintain low flammability and forest mortality, except initially after fires. | |
| Evolutionary responses | 1. Fire resistant trees. | 1. Fire resistant and fire-dependent or specialized biota. The latter includes species with reproduction timed to coincide with fire via fire-cued germination, fire “embracer” plant species, and post-fire insect and bird specialists). |
| Fire exclusion leads to | 1. High tree regeneration*. | 1. Low tree regeneration. |
| 2. Greatly increased flammability. | 2. Small changes in flammability (vegetation is continuously flammable except initially after fire). | |
| 3. Increased forestsusceptibility to mixed-severity fire. | 3. Decreased susceptibility to mixed-severity fire. | |
| Carbon storage | 1. Low-moderate; considerably lower than carrying capacity. | 1. Moderate to high; Near carrying capacity. |
| Fuel treatments (forest thinning) | 1. Restores forest tree structure and fuelloads where infill associated withfire exclusion is removed. | 1. May create uncharacteristic structure and composition (reduction in small and intermediate and some overstory trees, shrubs, down wood). |
| 2. Increase open forest (woodland) biota. | 2. Decrease in dense forest biota and post-fire habitat specialists. | |
| 3. May create low contrast heterogeneity. | 3. May reduce high-contrast heterogeneity. |
[135]–[137].
Figure 1Study area.
Dots indicate the general locations of Forest Inventory and Analysis (FIA) plots.
Mean annual precipitation, and mean summer maximum and minimum temperatures, in ponderosa pine and mixed-conifer forests in each region.
| Region | Mean annual precipitation(cm) | Mean maximum temperature,June-August (degrees C) | Mean minimum temperature,June-August (degrees C) |
| Sierra Nevada | 104 | 23 | 9 |
| Klamath | 196 | 26 | 11 |
| Eastern Cascades and Eastern Sierra Nevada | 113 | 21 | 7 |
| Northern Rockies | 88 | 22 | 6 |
| Central and Southern Rockies | 71 | 22 | 6 |
| Southwest | 58 | 27 | 11 |
All values are from PRISM data (http://www.prism.oregonstate.edu/normals/) in each 2 km2 PRISM pixel within which an FIA plot used in the study occurred.
Figure 2Age class distributions of dominant overstory trees.
Data are from US Forest Service Forest Inventory and Monitoring plots from forested areas protected from logging in A. the western (main) Sierra Nevada, B. the Klamath Region, C. the eastern Cascades and Sierra Nevada, D. the northern Rockies, E. the central/southern Rockies, and F. the southwestern USA. Shown in black bars is the current distributions of stand ages. Grey bars show an expected distribution (average age of dominant overstory trees with no fire exclusion), based on projecting the occurrence of the same age distributions that occurred from 1810–1889 into the most recent 80 year time period and rescaling these data. The number of plots by forest type are shown in the imbedded tables. Non-stocked stands are those lacking trees that grew after the fire that could be aged non-destructively.
Rotations for high-severity and moderate-severity fire in low/mid-elevation conifer forests of western North America.
| Region | Location | Source | Analysis area (ha) | Forest types | Tree mortality | Time period | Approximate rotation (years) |
| Pacific states | Northern Baja California |
| 40,700 | Mixed conifer and Jeffrey pine | >90% overstory mortality | 1925–1991 | 300 |
| Northern Sierra Nevada |
| 146,917 | Mixed conifer, dominatedby ponderosa pine | 75% mortality by volumewas mapped for patches>32.4 ha | 1800–1900 | 488 | |
| EasternCascades (Washington) |
| 175,200 | Mixed conifer andponderosa pine | >70% tree mortality | ∼1830–1930 | 379–505 | |
| >20% tree mortality | ∼1830–1930 | 115–128 | |||||
| Eastern Cascades (Oregon) |
| 123,500 | Ponderosa pine | >70% tree mortality | ∼1768–1882 | 705 | |
| 140,400 | Dry mixed conifer | >70% tree mortality | ∼1768–1882 | 496 | |||
| Northern Rockies | Oregon (Blue Mountains) |
| 304,700 | Ponderosa pine forests | >70% tree mortality | ∼1740–1880 | 849 |
| Oregon (Blue Mountains) |
| 304,700 | Ponderosa pine forests | Moderate- and high-severity fire | ∼1740–1880 | 235 | |
| Central Rockies | Central (Colorado Front Range) |
| 65,500 | Ponderosa pine forests | >70% tree mortality | ∼1705–1880 | 271 |
| Central (Colorado Front Range) |
| 624,156 | Mostly ponderosa pineand Douglas-fir | Moderate and high-severity fire | 1809–1883 | 249 | |
| Southwest (Arizona) | Black Mesa |
| 151,100 | Ponderosa pine forests | >70% tree mortality | ∼1760–1880 | 217 |
| Mogollon Plateau |
| 452,100 | Ponderosa pine forests | >70% tree mortality | ∼1760–1880 | 828 | |
| Mogollon Plateau |
| 452,100 | Ponderosa pine forests | Moderate- and high-severity fire | ∼1760–1880 | 319 | |
| Black Mesaand Mogollon combined |
| 603,200 | Ponderosa pine forests | >70% tree mortality | ∼1760–1880 | 522 |
Data from General Land Office or mapped data over large areas (>25,000 ha) over >70 or more years prior to fire exclusion.
Study area was dominated by mixed conifer and Jeffrey pine and minimally logged. Fire exclusion only began in the 1970s and has had only a modest impact [138]. Thus, historical and current rates are assumed to be comparable.
Analysis of Leiberg’s mapping of high-severity fire areas within unlogged mixed-conifer Sierran stands is found in [139]. According to Leiberg [51], most such fire occurred prior to 1850. In addition, he stated “If the many small lots [<32 ha] scattered throughout still growing stands were taken into account, the figure [amount of area burned severely] would be considerably increased.”
The numerator was estimated at 100 years based on ponderosa pine in this region [140], whose growth would surpass 30 cm dbh, rendering mixed and high-severity effects indistinguishable (see [35: Table 1]). This calculation is conservative because tree growth to 30 cm dbh in moister forests is faster than 100 years.
High- and mixed-severity fire consistent with a definition of >70% and 20–70% basal area mortality, respectively, was identified from overstory canopy percentage, the overstory size class, the understory size class, and the fire tolerance of the cover type (see [35: Table 1]). Large patch sizes of historical high severity fire (100s to >5000 ha) from this work are reported in [17].
The estimate is from the span of years over which fire effects were distinguishable, using forest structure evident in the Government Land Office historical survey data, divided by the fraction of the forested landscape in which those fires occurred [56]. Rotations for high-severity fire are determined by dividing the observation period (the period of time over which fire effects are distinguishable by stand structure) by the percentage of the landscape experiencing high-severity fire. The methods were found to have 14.4–23% accuracy compared to plot sampling.
High- and mixed-severity fire, consistent with a definition of >70% and 20–70%, respectively, were identified from overstory canopy percentage, the overstory size class, the understory size class, and the fire tolerance of the cover type (see [35: Table 1]).
High-severity consistent with a definition of >70% basal area mortality [35] was identified having a percentage of small trees >50% and a percentage of large trees <20% [56], [57], [73],
Estimated from the length of General Land Office section lines intercepted by moderate- and high-severity fire. Accuracy tests using the length of section lines intercepted by modern moderate- and high-severity fire yielded a relative error of 15.6%.
Forest Inventory and Analysis (FIA) data.
| Region | Number of plots (n) andforest area randomlysampled (ha) | Mean FIA stand age (yrs) | Test for difference in stand initiation since 1930 vs. 1800–1900: Chi-square, | |
| Current | In 1930 | |||
| Sierra Nevada (main) | n = 232 338,400 | 148 | 97 | 86.3, <<0.001 |
| E. Cascades and E. Sierra Nevada | n = 135 192,000 | 155 | 114 | 25.4, <<0.001 |
| Klamath Mountains | n = 251 372,000 | 157 | 111 | 43.9, <<0.001 |
| Central Rockies | n = 276 446,400 | 105 | 75 | 58.9, <<0.001 |
| Northern Rockies | n = 1929 3,244,800 | 105 | 70 | 333.8<<0.001 |
| Southwestern US | n = 319 492,000 | 116 | 59 | 188.2<<0.001 |
Area of sample population randomly sampled, mean stand age currently, and in 1930, and Chi-square test results.
Current high-severity fire rotations.
| Region | Source | Forest Types | Time period | Rotation (yrs) |
| Sierra Nevada, southern Cascades |
| All low/mid- and mid/upper elevation conifer forests | 1984–2010 | 645 |
| Klamath (all) |
| All low/mid-elevation conifer forests | 1984–2005 | 599 |
| Eastern Cascades (all) |
| All low/mid-elevation conifer forests | 1984–2005 | 889 |
| Northern Rockies |
| Ponderosa pine forests | 1980–2003 | 500 |
| Central Rockies |
| Ponderosa pine forests | 1980–2003 | 714 |
| Central Rockies |
| Ponderosa pine forests | 1984–2009 | 431 |
| Southwest |
| Ponderosa pine forests | 1984–2003 | 625 |
| Northwest (Eastern Cascadesand Blue Mountains) |
| Ponderosa pine | 1984–2003 | 1,000 |
Data cited are from low/mid-elevation conifer forests in western North America.
Higher-severity fire: includes moderate- and high-severity.