Patterns, drivers, and implications of postfire delayed tree mortality in temperate conifer forests of the western United States

Author:

Busby Sebastian1ORCID,Evers Cody2ORCID,Holz Andrés1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geography Portland State University Portland Oregon USA

2. Department of Environmental Science and Management Portland State University Portland Oregon USA

Abstract

AbstractConifer forest resilience may be threatened by increasing wildfire activity and compound disturbances in western North America. Fire refugia enhance forest resilience, yet may decline over time due to delayed mortality—a process that remains poorly understood at landscape and regional scales. To address this uncertainty, we used high‐resolution satellite imagery (5‐m pixel) to map and quantify delayed mortality of conifer tree cover between 1 and 5 years postfire, across 30 large wildfires that burned within three montane ecoregions in the western United States. We used statistical models to explore the influence of burn severity, topography, soils, and climate moisture deficit on delayed mortality. We estimate that delayed mortality reduced live conifer tree cover by 5%–25% at the fire perimeter scale and 12%–15% at the ecoregion scale. Remotely sensed burn severity (1‐year postfire) was the strongest predictor of delayed mortality, indicating patch‐level fire effects are a strong proxy for fire injury severity among surviving trees that eventually perish. Delayed mortality rates were further influenced by long‐term average and short‐term postfire climate moisture deficits, illustrating the impact of drought on fire‐injured tree survival. Our work demonstrates that delayed mortality in conifer forests of the western United States can be remotely quantified at a fine grain and landscape scale, is a spatially extensive phenomenon, is driven by fire–climate–environment interactions, and has important ecological implications.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Reference104 articles.

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2. Agee J. K.1996.“The Influence of Forest Structure on Fire Behavior.”InProceedings of the 17th Forest Vegetation Management Conference 52–68. Redding CA.

3. The Landscape Ecology of Western Forest Fire Regimes;Agee J. K.;Northwest Science,1998

4. Monitoring Post‐Fire Tree Mortality in Mixed‐Conifer Forests of Crater Lake, Oregon, USA;Agee J. K.;Natural Areas Journal,2003

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