Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byTobias Tyler Modified over 9 years ago
1
Climate-induced Shifts in Fire Frequency, and Resulting Effects on Stand Composition Carissa D. Brown Northern Biogeography Lab Department of Geography, Memorial University
2
Black spruce (Picea mariana)
3
Fire drives secondary succession and species distribution in boreal forests
4
Short window of opportunity
5
Temperature trends (1960-2009) Burrows et al. 2011 Science; Chapin et al. 2005 Science
6
Climate-fire regimes Flannigan et al. 2005 Ratio of 3xCO2 / 1xCO2 area burned:
7
Climate-fire-succession Balshi et al. 2009 Kasischke and Turetsky 2006
8
Fire drives secondary succession and species distribution in boreal forests What happens if fire regimes change?
9
How will changes in fire-climate interactions effect black spruce distribution?
10
1990 1991
11
1990 1991 2005
12
mature forest long- interval fire short- interval fire
13
mature forest
14
long-interval fire
16
short-interval fire
17
mature forestlong-interval burnshort-interval burn Post-fire colonisation: is seed available?
18
Seed availability mature forest LISI short interval Number of viable seeds/m 2 /year 0 2 4 6 8 Brown and Johnstone, 2012, For. Ecol. Man. long interval Fire history
19
Will seed germinate and survive?
20
Number of emerged seedlings Fire history Brown and Johnstone, 2012, For. Ecol. Man. Black spruce emergence
21
fire return interval seed availability establishment growth and survival long short seed Closely timed fires short-circuit regeneration cycles
22
A failure in two parts 1.Lack of seed 2.Unsuitable substrate
23
A failure in two parts Long-term disruption
24
Indirect climate effects caused by a change to the disturbance regime may initiate vegetation shifts of a larger magnitude or opposite direction than would happen due to climate alone
25
mammal
26
Carbon storage
28
wood organic horizon 1990/91 2005 mature forestlong-interval burnshort-interval burn Fire history
29
How will shifting fire regimes influence tree distributions in the boreal forest? If serotiny loses its advantage (ecosystems become less resilient), what will succeed?
30
The prediction Regions that have experienced a novel disturbance regime will become more suitable for alternative tree species dominance
31
Dalton Complex, Alaska Boundary Fire, Alaska Taylor Complex, AlaskaEagle Plains, Yukon Black spruce ecosystems
33
Future scenarios for successional shifts black spruce self-replacement historic regime severity frequency BS seed severity frequency BS seed moisture In the absence of seed limitation
34
Current distributions Black spruce
35
Current distributions Black spruce White spruce
36
Current distributions Black spruce White spruce Paper birch
37
50 km Black spruce White spruce Paper birch
38
Shifting regimes in Labrador
39
…and many, many field assistants, labmates, and colleagues. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Dr. Jill Johnstone, University of Saskatchewan
40
050100150200250 0 1 2 3 4 5 Mean stand age Seedling density. m 2 Stand recovery to 4000 trees/ha Viglas, Brown, et al. in review, Can. J. Forest Research High severity fire (good post-fire seedbed) Low severity fire (poor post-fire seedbed) Thresholds for stand recovery Range of seed requirements Threshold for recovery: 50 – 150 years
41
Patterns between species: Alaska Number of seedlings Soil moisture (%) Black spruceAlaskan birch Species-specific optimal seed bed conditions
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.