Prescribed burning to increase the richness of long-unburned and fragmented mallee communities
Abstract
Fire regimes have been altered by human activity in fire-prone
landscapes around the world. In eastern Kangaroo Island in South
Australia, the frequency of fire has decreased and the richness
of fragmented remnant plant communities is declining. Land
managers in this area are considering reintroducing fire through
prescribed burning to increase native plant species richness, but
the effects of such an intervention are difficult to accurately
predict. This thesis explores solutions to this problem by
experimentally testing the effect of prescribed burning on the
richness of long-unburned and fragmented native plant
communities.
A total of 35 prescribed burns were conducted by a large number
of local fire-fighters and land managers and in spring and autumn
in 2009 and 2010. Post-fire surveys revealed that prescribed
burning increased native plant species richness. However,
unexpectedly, this result was not influenced by burn season or
pre-fire modification of vegetation structure and fuels. The
effects of prescribed burning on post-fire native plant species
richness also varied considerably between experimental sites.
Subsequent analysis revealed that high post-fire native plant
species richness was associated with high pre-fire native soil
seedbank richness, low introduced soil seedbank richness, low
post-fire canopy cover, low soil heating during fire events, the
exclusion of native herbivores and the amount of native
vegetation within 500 m.
This thesis provides land managers with the knowledge to adapt
site selection and prescribed burn methods to maximise post-fire
native plant species richness in fragmented plant communities in
eastern Kangaroo Island. The findings are also likely to be
applicable to other long-unburned and fragmented fire-prone
ecosystems that support substantial soil-seedbanks.
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