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Broadcast burning has persistent, but subtle, effects on understory composition and structure: Results of a long-term study in western Cascade forests
Approaches to forest management have changed markedly in the Pacific Northwest in recent decades, yet legacies of past management persist on the landscape. Following clearcut logging, woody residues were typically burned to reduce future fire hazard, create planting spots, facilitate natural recruit...
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Published in: | Forest ecology and management 2024-04, Vol.558, p.121772, Article 121772 |
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description | Approaches to forest management have changed markedly in the Pacific Northwest in recent decades, yet legacies of past management persist on the landscape. Following clearcut logging, woody residues were typically burned to reduce future fire hazard, create planting spots, facilitate natural recruitment, and retard growth of competing vegetation. We asked whether legacies of broadcast burning persist in the forest understory during the early stages of stand closure, how they manifest structurally or compositionally, whether they are altered by subsequent management (pre-commercial thinning), and how they vary with gradients in the physical environment or stand structure. We used data from 44 pairs of burned and unburned plots sampled 37–42 years after clearcut logging of mature and old-growth forests in western Oregon and Washington. Burning had persistent, but mostly subtle effects on community structure and composition. Burned plots had greater cover of early-seral species and lower cover of woody forest species. Among the latter, tall shrubs showed consistently negative responses to burning. Smaller-statured woody and herbaceous species were more variable in their responses, reflecting a greater diversity of regenerative traits. For some understory attributes, effects of burning were contingent on thinning history. For example, burning enhanced species richness and reduced species evenness, but only in unthinned sites. Conversely, burning increased the spatial variability of tall shrub cover, but only in thinned sites. In some instances, thinning compounded the effects of burning, resulting in a four-fold increase in cover of early-seral herbs and a 50% reduction in cover of forest tall shrubs relative to plots that received neither treatment. For most understory attributes, regional variation in the magnitude of the burn effect was not easily explained by burn severity, site environment, or stand structure. Collectively, our results highlight the persistent, but highly variable, effects of broadcast burning on the post-harvest development of the forest understory. They suggest that, where it is feasible, controlled burning can be used in regeneration-harvest units to achieve a variety of management objectives, with minimal effect on the forest understory.
•We detected persistent, but subtle, effects on the understory 40 years after broadcast burning•Burning led to greater cover of early-seral species, but lower cover of woody forest species•Burning enh |
doi_str_mv | 10.1016/j.foreco.2024.121772 |
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•We detected persistent, but subtle, effects on the understory 40 years after broadcast burning•Burning led to greater cover of early-seral species, but lower cover of woody forest species•Burning enhanced species richness and reduced species evenness, but only in unthinned sites•Thinning compounded the effects of burning on early-seral herbs and residual tall shrubs•Variation in the magnitude of the burn effect was not easily explained by site characteristics</description><identifier>ISSN: 0378-1127</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 1872-7042</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.1016/j.foreco.2024.121772</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Elsevier B.V</publisher><subject>administrative management ; Broadcast burning ; burn severity ; Clearcut logging ; clearcutting ; community structure ; Fire effects ; fire hazard ; forest ecology ; forest management ; forestry development ; forests ; herbaceous plants ; landscapes ; Oregon ; Pacific Northwest ; Plant diversity ; shrubs ; Slash burning ; species ; species richness ; stand structure ; understory ; Understory vegetation ; Vegetation structure</subject><ispartof>Forest ecology and management, 2024-04, Vol.558, p.121772, Article 121772</ispartof><rights>2024 Elsevier B.V.</rights><lds50>peer_reviewed</lds50><woscitedreferencessubscribed>false</woscitedreferencessubscribed><cites>FETCH-LOGICAL-c288t-6872a34a528e91a3416e574dadda22d480db7bbfd3276e81809994cf375c52c23</cites></display><links><openurl>$$Topenurl_article</openurl><openurlfulltext>$$Topenurlfull_article</openurlfulltext><thumbnail>$$Tsyndetics_thumb_exl</thumbnail><link.rule.ids>314,777,781,27905,27906</link.rule.ids></links><search><creatorcontrib>Halpern, Charles B.</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Lezberg, Ann L.</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Bigley, Richard E.</creatorcontrib><title>Broadcast burning has persistent, but subtle, effects on understory composition and structure: Results of a long-term study in western Cascade forests</title><title>Forest ecology and management</title><description>Approaches to forest management have changed markedly in the Pacific Northwest in recent decades, yet legacies of past management persist on the landscape. Following clearcut logging, woody residues were typically burned to reduce future fire hazard, create planting spots, facilitate natural recruitment, and retard growth of competing vegetation. We asked whether legacies of broadcast burning persist in the forest understory during the early stages of stand closure, how they manifest structurally or compositionally, whether they are altered by subsequent management (pre-commercial thinning), and how they vary with gradients in the physical environment or stand structure. We used data from 44 pairs of burned and unburned plots sampled 37–42 years after clearcut logging of mature and old-growth forests in western Oregon and Washington. Burning had persistent, but mostly subtle effects on community structure and composition. Burned plots had greater cover of early-seral species and lower cover of woody forest species. Among the latter, tall shrubs showed consistently negative responses to burning. Smaller-statured woody and herbaceous species were more variable in their responses, reflecting a greater diversity of regenerative traits. For some understory attributes, effects of burning were contingent on thinning history. For example, burning enhanced species richness and reduced species evenness, but only in unthinned sites. Conversely, burning increased the spatial variability of tall shrub cover, but only in thinned sites. In some instances, thinning compounded the effects of burning, resulting in a four-fold increase in cover of early-seral herbs and a 50% reduction in cover of forest tall shrubs relative to plots that received neither treatment. For most understory attributes, regional variation in the magnitude of the burn effect was not easily explained by burn severity, site environment, or stand structure. Collectively, our results highlight the persistent, but highly variable, effects of broadcast burning on the post-harvest development of the forest understory. They suggest that, where it is feasible, controlled burning can be used in regeneration-harvest units to achieve a variety of management objectives, with minimal effect on the forest understory.
•We detected persistent, but subtle, effects on the understory 40 years after broadcast burning•Burning led to greater cover of early-seral species, but lower cover of woody forest species•Burning enhanced species richness and reduced species evenness, but only in unthinned sites•Thinning compounded the effects of burning on early-seral herbs and residual tall shrubs•Variation in the magnitude of the burn effect was not easily explained by site characteristics</description><subject>administrative management</subject><subject>Broadcast burning</subject><subject>burn severity</subject><subject>Clearcut logging</subject><subject>clearcutting</subject><subject>community structure</subject><subject>Fire effects</subject><subject>fire hazard</subject><subject>forest ecology</subject><subject>forest management</subject><subject>forestry development</subject><subject>forests</subject><subject>herbaceous plants</subject><subject>landscapes</subject><subject>Oregon</subject><subject>Pacific Northwest</subject><subject>Plant diversity</subject><subject>shrubs</subject><subject>Slash burning</subject><subject>species</subject><subject>species richness</subject><subject>stand structure</subject><subject>understory</subject><subject>Understory vegetation</subject><subject>Vegetation structure</subject><issn>0378-1127</issn><issn>1872-7042</issn><fulltext>true</fulltext><rsrctype>article</rsrctype><creationdate>2024</creationdate><recordtype>article</recordtype><recordid>eNp9kcFOGzEQhq2KSg2UN-DgYw9sant3Y6cHJIiAVkKqVLVny2vPgqONHTx2UV6E58XRcuY0o9H3z-ifn5ALzpac8dX37XKMCWxcCia6JRdcSvGJLLiSopGsEydkwVqpGs6F_EJOEbeMsb7v1IK83qRonDWY6VBS8OGRPhmke0joMUPIl3WeKZYhT3BJYRzBZqQx0BJchXJMB2rjbh_RZ1_HJjiKORWbS4If9A9gmY6CkRo6xfDYZEi7ShR3oD7QF6hXUqAbg9Y4oEcjmPEr-TyaCeH8vZ6Rf3e3fzc_m4ff97821w-NFUrlZlUdmrYzvVCw5rXjK-hl54xzRgjXKeYGOQyja4VcgeKKrdfrzo6t7G0vrGjPyLd57z7F51Iv651HC9NkAsSCuuV9fRznsq1oN6M2RcQEo94nvzPpoDnTxxj0Vs8x6GMMeo6hyq5mGVQb_z0kjdZDsOB8ZbN20X-84A1GKpXT</recordid><startdate>20240415</startdate><enddate>20240415</enddate><creator>Halpern, Charles B.</creator><creator>Lezberg, Ann L.</creator><creator>Bigley, Richard E.</creator><general>Elsevier B.V</general><scope>AAYXX</scope><scope>CITATION</scope><scope>7S9</scope><scope>L.6</scope></search><sort><creationdate>20240415</creationdate><title>Broadcast burning has persistent, but subtle, effects on understory composition and structure: Results of a long-term study in western Cascade forests</title><author>Halpern, Charles B. ; Lezberg, Ann L. ; Bigley, Richard E.</author></sort><facets><frbrtype>5</frbrtype><frbrgroupid>cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c288t-6872a34a528e91a3416e574dadda22d480db7bbfd3276e81809994cf375c52c23</frbrgroupid><rsrctype>articles</rsrctype><prefilter>articles</prefilter><language>eng</language><creationdate>2024</creationdate><topic>administrative management</topic><topic>Broadcast burning</topic><topic>burn severity</topic><topic>Clearcut logging</topic><topic>clearcutting</topic><topic>community structure</topic><topic>Fire effects</topic><topic>fire hazard</topic><topic>forest ecology</topic><topic>forest management</topic><topic>forestry development</topic><topic>forests</topic><topic>herbaceous plants</topic><topic>landscapes</topic><topic>Oregon</topic><topic>Pacific Northwest</topic><topic>Plant diversity</topic><topic>shrubs</topic><topic>Slash burning</topic><topic>species</topic><topic>species richness</topic><topic>stand structure</topic><topic>understory</topic><topic>Understory vegetation</topic><topic>Vegetation structure</topic><toplevel>peer_reviewed</toplevel><toplevel>online_resources</toplevel><creatorcontrib>Halpern, Charles B.</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Lezberg, Ann L.</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Bigley, Richard E.</creatorcontrib><collection>CrossRef</collection><collection>AGRICOLA</collection><collection>AGRICOLA - Academic</collection><jtitle>Forest ecology and management</jtitle></facets><delivery><delcategory>Remote Search Resource</delcategory><fulltext>fulltext</fulltext></delivery><addata><au>Halpern, Charles B.</au><au>Lezberg, Ann L.</au><au>Bigley, Richard E.</au><format>journal</format><genre>article</genre><ristype>JOUR</ristype><atitle>Broadcast burning has persistent, but subtle, effects on understory composition and structure: Results of a long-term study in western Cascade forests</atitle><jtitle>Forest ecology and management</jtitle><date>2024-04-15</date><risdate>2024</risdate><volume>558</volume><spage>121772</spage><pages>121772-</pages><artnum>121772</artnum><issn>0378-1127</issn><eissn>1872-7042</eissn><abstract>Approaches to forest management have changed markedly in the Pacific Northwest in recent decades, yet legacies of past management persist on the landscape. Following clearcut logging, woody residues were typically burned to reduce future fire hazard, create planting spots, facilitate natural recruitment, and retard growth of competing vegetation. We asked whether legacies of broadcast burning persist in the forest understory during the early stages of stand closure, how they manifest structurally or compositionally, whether they are altered by subsequent management (pre-commercial thinning), and how they vary with gradients in the physical environment or stand structure. We used data from 44 pairs of burned and unburned plots sampled 37–42 years after clearcut logging of mature and old-growth forests in western Oregon and Washington. Burning had persistent, but mostly subtle effects on community structure and composition. Burned plots had greater cover of early-seral species and lower cover of woody forest species. Among the latter, tall shrubs showed consistently negative responses to burning. Smaller-statured woody and herbaceous species were more variable in their responses, reflecting a greater diversity of regenerative traits. For some understory attributes, effects of burning were contingent on thinning history. For example, burning enhanced species richness and reduced species evenness, but only in unthinned sites. Conversely, burning increased the spatial variability of tall shrub cover, but only in thinned sites. In some instances, thinning compounded the effects of burning, resulting in a four-fold increase in cover of early-seral herbs and a 50% reduction in cover of forest tall shrubs relative to plots that received neither treatment. For most understory attributes, regional variation in the magnitude of the burn effect was not easily explained by burn severity, site environment, or stand structure. Collectively, our results highlight the persistent, but highly variable, effects of broadcast burning on the post-harvest development of the forest understory. They suggest that, where it is feasible, controlled burning can be used in regeneration-harvest units to achieve a variety of management objectives, with minimal effect on the forest understory.
•We detected persistent, but subtle, effects on the understory 40 years after broadcast burning•Burning led to greater cover of early-seral species, but lower cover of woody forest species•Burning enhanced species richness and reduced species evenness, but only in unthinned sites•Thinning compounded the effects of burning on early-seral herbs and residual tall shrubs•Variation in the magnitude of the burn effect was not easily explained by site characteristics</abstract><pub>Elsevier B.V</pub><doi>10.1016/j.foreco.2024.121772</doi></addata></record> |
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subjects | administrative management Broadcast burning burn severity Clearcut logging clearcutting community structure Fire effects fire hazard forest ecology forest management forestry development forests herbaceous plants landscapes Oregon Pacific Northwest Plant diversity shrubs Slash burning species species richness stand structure understory Understory vegetation Vegetation structure |
title | Broadcast burning has persistent, but subtle, effects on understory composition and structure: Results of a long-term study in western Cascade forests |
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