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Pine plantations and invasion alter fuel structure and potential fire behavior in a patagonian forest-steppe ecotone
Resumen
Planted and invading non-native plant species can alter fire regimes through changes
in fuel loads and in the structure and continuity of fuels, potentially modifying the flammability
of native plant communities. Such changes are not easily predicted and deserve system-specific
studies. In several regions of the southern hemisphere, exotic pines have been extensively planted in
native treeless areas for forestry purposes and have subsequently invaded
[ver mas...]
Planted and invading non-native plant species can alter fire regimes through changes
in fuel loads and in the structure and continuity of fuels, potentially modifying the flammability
of native plant communities. Such changes are not easily predicted and deserve system-specific
studies. In several regions of the southern hemisphere, exotic pines have been extensively planted in
native treeless areas for forestry purposes and have subsequently invaded the native environments.
However, studies evaluating alterations in flammability caused by pines in Patagonia are scarce. In the
forest-steppe ecotone of northwestern Patagonia, we evaluated fine fuels structure and simulated fire
behavior in the native shrubby steppe, pine plantations, pine invasions, and mechanically removed
invasions to establish the relative ecological vulnerability of these forestry and invasion scenarios to
fire. We found that pine plantations and their subsequent invasion in the Patagonian shrubby steppe
produced sharp changes in fine fuel amount and its vertical and horizontal continuity. These changes
in fuel properties have the potential to affect fire behavior, increasing fire intensity by almost 30 times.
Pruning of basal branches in plantations may substantially reduce fire hazard by lowering the
probability of fire crowning, and mechanical removal of invasion seems effective in restoring original
fuel structure in the native community. The current expansion of pine plantations and subsequent
invasions acting synergistically with climate warming and increased human ignitions warrant a
highly vulnerable landscape in the near future for northwestern Patagonia if no management actions
are undertaken.
[Cerrar]
Autor
Paritsis, Juan;
Landesmann, Jennifer Brenda;
Kitzberger, Thomas;
Tiribelli, Florencia;
Sasal, Yamila;
Quintero, Carolina;
Dimarco, Romina Daniela;
Barrios Garcia Moar, Maria Noelia;
Iglesias, Aimee L.;
Diez, Juan Pablo;
Sarasola, Mauro Miguel;
Nuñez, Martin Andrés;
Fuente
Forests 9 (3) : 1-17. (3 March 2018)
Fecha
2018-03-03
ISSN
1999-4907
DOI
Formato
pdf
Tipo de documento
artículo
Palabras Claves
Derechos de acceso
Abierto
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