Fire: plant functional types and patch mosaic burning in fire-prone ecosystems

Author:

Allen H.D.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geography, University of Cambridge, Downing Place, Cambridge CB2 3EN, UK,

Abstract

Shared fire-survival and fire-persistence traits are found in taxonomically unrelated plant species that commonly grow in fire-prone ecosystems. Such traits include resprouting, after fire has killed the above-ground biomass, and postfire seed release after the death of individual plants. Classification of such traits has led to a change in focus from research on the impact of fire as a disturbance factor on individual species, towards research into plant functional types associated with fire. This has led to a better understanding of the timing and geographic evolution of such traits as either fire-adapted or as a selective response to other disturbance factors. The identification of fire-survival and fire-persistence traits in fire-prone ecosystems is the first focus of this paper. It is followed by a discussion of recent research which offers a critical reappraisal of patch mosaic burning as a means to increase landscape heterogeneity and biodiversity, including the role played by plant functional types in determining diversity. The fire-prone ecosystems of mediterranean-type shrublands and heathlands, savannas and grasslands, and boreal and other coniferous forests are the main geographic focus of the paper.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Geography, Planning and Development

Reference60 articles.

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2. Andersen, A.N., Cook, G.D. and Müller, W.J. 2003: Synthesis: fire ecology and adaptive conservation management . In Andersen, A.N., Cook, G.D. and Williams, R.J., editors, Fire in tropical savannas, New York: Springer-Verlag, 153-64.

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