post-fire recovery in black spruce forests analysis summary october 2007 jill johnstone

18
Post-fire recovery in black spruce forests Analysis Summary October 2007 Jill Johnstone

Upload: geraldine-morgan

Post on 12-Jan-2016

213 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Post-fire recovery in black spruce forests Analysis Summary October 2007 Jill Johnstone

Post-fire recovery in black spruce forests

Analysis Summary

October 2007

Jill Johnstone

Page 2: Post-fire recovery in black spruce forests Analysis Summary October 2007 Jill Johnstone

Intensive Sites

• 32 forest sites + 5 treeline sites

• Range of moisture * severity levels

• Seed and seedling applications in 2005

• Initial responses surveyed in 2006

Page 3: Post-fire recovery in black spruce forests Analysis Summary October 2007 Jill Johnstone

• Site moisture– drainage class– mid-season soil moisture– soil texture

• Fire severity– visual severity rank– pre-fire organic layer from

adventitious roots• Post-fire seedbeds

– residual organic layer depth– cover of seedbed types– % cover of organics>3 cm– composite burn index (CBI)

• Post-fire recruitment– seedling densities – transplant growth

Field measurements

Page 4: Post-fire recovery in black spruce forests Analysis Summary October 2007 Jill Johnstone

surfacefire

severity

organicseedbeds

pre-fireorganicdepth

site moisture

landscapeposition

Fire and Site Effects on Seedbeds:Hypotheses

• Assess using Structural Equation Modeling

Page 5: Post-fire recovery in black spruce forests Analysis Summary October 2007 Jill Johnstone

Univariate correlations0 40 80

040

80

moss.cov

0 1 2 3 4 0 20 60 1 2 3 4 5 0.5 1.5 2.5 1 2 3 4 5 6

040

80

sqrt.org

01

23

4

org.cov

020

60

soil.sev.rank

12

34

5

CBI.substrate

0.5

1.5

2.5

1 2 3 4 5 6

12

34

56

drainage

Page 6: Post-fire recovery in black spruce forests Analysis Summary October 2007 Jill Johnstone

Fire and Site Effects on Seedbeds:

Model Specification

severity index(1=low, 5=high consumption)

pre-fire organic depth (adv. root height in cm)

drainage index(1=subhygric, 6=xeric)

elevation (m)

OrganicSeedbeds

Composite BurnIndex

post-fire organicdepth (cm)

% cover of bare organics

Page 7: Post-fire recovery in black spruce forests Analysis Summary October 2007 Jill Johnstone

Fire and Site Effects on Seedbeds:

Model Results

severity index

pre-fire organicdepth (adv. roots)

drainage index

elevation

OrganicSeedbeds

Composite BurnIndex

post-fire organicdepth

organic seedbedcover

-0.73

0.42

-0.42

Model χ2=13.5, p=0.2 (no significant lack of fit)

0.70

0.51

0.90

R2=0.96

dashed lines are ns

Page 8: Post-fire recovery in black spruce forests Analysis Summary October 2007 Jill Johnstone

Summary: Fire Effects on Seedbeds• Organic soils dominate seedbeds where:

– Pre-fire organic layers were thick– High elevation restricts surface fire severity

• Variations in fire severity:– ~50% of the variation in organic seedbeds

• Expect impacts of organic seedbeds to be strongly controlled by fire severity

Page 9: Post-fire recovery in black spruce forests Analysis Summary October 2007 Jill Johnstone

post-fireorganic

seedbed

coniferrecruitment

site moisture

landscapefactors

Site and Seedbed Effects on Tree Recruitment: Hypotheses

• Note: Seed availability is fixed for seeded plots and is not included in the model

deciduousrecruitment

Page 10: Post-fire recovery in black spruce forests Analysis Summary October 2007 Jill Johnstone

Seedling counts0 1 2 3 4

01

23

4BS_sqrt

0.0 1.0 2.0 3.0 0 1 2 3 4 5 0 1 2 3 4 0 1 2 3 4

01

23

4

WS_sqrt

0.0

1.0

2.0

3.0

LP_sqrt

01

23

45

TA_sqrt

01

23

4

0 1 2 3 4

01

23

4

PB_sqrt

Page 11: Post-fire recovery in black spruce forests Analysis Summary October 2007 Jill Johnstone

drainage

elev.

resid.org

BS WS LP

conifer

TA PB

deciduous

Used residual organic layer depth (sqrt transformed) to

represent seedbed effects (and fire severity)

Site and Seedbed Effects: Model specification

Seedling counts of black spruce, white spruce, lodgepole pine (highly intercorrelated, r>0.8)

Seedling counts of trembling aspen and paper birch (moderately correlated, r=0.7)

Page 12: Post-fire recovery in black spruce forests Analysis Summary October 2007 Jill Johnstone

drainage

elev.

resid.org

BS WS LP

conifer

TA PB

deciduous

Model χ2=19.2, df=15, p=0.2 (no significant lack of fit)

0.310.36

0.50

-0.42

-0.48

-0.35R2=0.57

R2=0.48

0.98 0.91 0.87

0.86 0.85

Site and Seedbed Effects: ResultsPresenting standardized regression coefficients and sum of squared correlations for predicted seedling counts

Page 13: Post-fire recovery in black spruce forests Analysis Summary October 2007 Jill Johnstone

Drivers of forest regeneration

• Differential sensitivity of functional groups– Deciduous highly sensitive to

post-fire seedbeds– Conifers more responsive to

site moisture

• Important role of fire severity in potentially tipping the balance between deciduous and conifer dominance

Page 14: Post-fire recovery in black spruce forests Analysis Summary October 2007 Jill Johnstone

post-fireorganic

seedbed

seedlinggrowth

landscapefactors

site moisture

Seedling Growth: Hypotheses

• Note: Possibility for reciprocal effects between tissue N and seedling growth

tissuenitrogen

Page 15: Post-fire recovery in black spruce forests Analysis Summary October 2007 Jill Johnstone

post-fireorganic

seedbed

black spruceheight growth

elevation

site moistureindex

Seedling Growth: Results

• Note: Possibility for reciprocal effects between tissue N and seedling growth

tissue% nitrogen

+-

+

-

R2 = 0.73

R2 = 0.43

+

Page 16: Post-fire recovery in black spruce forests Analysis Summary October 2007 Jill Johnstone

Seedling Growth

Low severity

• Negative response to increasing organic layer depths

• Appears to mediated by N availability– need to clarify causal effects on

soil N as opposed to tissue N

• Generally consitent responses among species

• Greatest growth at driest sites

High severity

Page 17: Post-fire recovery in black spruce forests Analysis Summary October 2007 Jill Johnstone

Resilience of Black Spruce Forests

Low severity

• Black spruce self-replacement– More poorly drained sites– Sites with thick organic layers

(cool & moist)

• Potential switch to deciduous dominance– Where high burn severity

exposes mineral soils– More frequent with climate

warming?

High severity

Page 18: Post-fire recovery in black spruce forests Analysis Summary October 2007 Jill Johnstone

Thank you everyone!