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For a few years more: reductions in plant diversity 70 years after the last fire in Mediterranean forests

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Changes in community diversity and dynamics after fires in Mediterranean ecosystems are rarely investigated more than a few years after the fire even though pronounced changes can be expected in… Click to show full abstract

Changes in community diversity and dynamics after fires in Mediterranean ecosystems are rarely investigated more than a few years after the fire even though pronounced changes can be expected in the longer term due to substitution of canopy species. Pinus halepensis is strongly promoted by wildfire and should therefore be gradually substituted by Quercus species as the time since the last fire increases. We hypothesized that this tree substitution would cause changes in understorey plant diversity by changing resource availability and the abundance and properties of woody debris, leading to changes in biogeochemical processes. To test this hypothesis, we investigated the effect of the time since last fire on vascular plant composition and diversity by studying a 130 years post-fire chronosequence in mixed Mediterranean forests. The canopy composition went from domination by Pinus halepensis to domination by Quercus 70 years after the most recent fire. This transformation was associated with a change in the understorey involving a rarefaction of species present during the first decades after the fire. The plant density or cover also changed with time since the last fire, indicating a succession driven by species rarefaction rather than substitution. The mean richness and Shannon diversity per quadrat were highest shortly after the fire, and were significantly lower 70 or more years after the last fire. Fires are important for supporting highly diversified fire-dependent plant communities, and total plant richness decreases monotonically over time after fires, suggesting that fire suppression may reduce diversity in Mediterranean forests.

Keywords: plant; diversity; plant diversity; mediterranean forests; last fire

Journal Title: Plant Ecology
Year Published: 2020

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