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(2004) Fire regimes and vegetation responses in two Mediterranean-climate regions

Authors
Montenegro G. , Ginocchio R. , Segura A. , Keeley B.
Source
Revista Chilena de Historia Natural (2)
Type
P - Paper (2851)
Peer Review
2 - Medium (2288)
Audience
S - Specialist (3514)
Pages
455-464
Notes

Abstract: Wildfires resulting from thunderstorms are common in some Mediterranean-climate regions, such as southern California, and have played an important role in the ecology and evolution of the flora. Mediterranean-climate regions are major centers for human population and thus anthropogenic impacts on fire regimes may have important consequences on these plant formations. However, changes in fire regimes may have different impacts on Mediterranean type-ecosystems depending on the capability of plants to respond to such perturbations. Therefore, we compare here fire regimes and vegetation responses of two Mediterraneanclimate regions which differ in wildfire regimes and history of human occupation, the central zone of Chile (matorral) and the southern area of California in United States (chaparral). In Chile almost all fires result from anthropogenic activities, whereas lightning fires resulting from thunderstorms are frequent in California. In both regions fires are more frequent in summer, due to high accumulation of dry plant biomass for ignition.
Humans have markedly increased fires frequency both in the matorral and chaparral, but extent of burned
areas has remained unaltered, probably due to better fire suppression actions and a decline in the built-up of dry plant fuel associated to increased landscape fragmentation with less flammable agricultural and urban developments. As expected, post-fire plant regeneration responses differs between the matorral and chaparral due to differences in the importance of wildfires as a natural evolutionary force in the system. Plants from the
chaparral show a broader range of post-fire regeneration responses than the matorral, from basal resprouting, to lignotuber resprouting, and to fire-stimulated germination and flowering with fire-specific clues such as heat shock, chemicals from smoke or charred wood. Plants from the matorral have some resprouting capabilities after fire, but these probably evolved from other environmental pressures, such as severe and long summer droughts, herbivory, and volcanism. Although both Mediterranean-type ecosystems have shown to be
resilient to anthropogenic fires, increasing fire frequency may be an important factor that needs to be
considered as it may result in strong negative effects on plant successional trends and on plant diversity.

World_link Resources online

Folder Categories
Fire Plants
 
Tag_blue Keywords
Mediterranean climate human impacts matorral chaparral California
 
Map Countries
United States Chile
 
Map Regions
North America South America
 

Entered by: Holly Wallis-copley, 3/2009

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