Fire history differences in adjacent Jeffrey pine and upper montane forests in the eastern Sierra Nevada
Scott L. Stephens
International Journal of Wildland Fire 10(2) 161 - 167
Abstract
Fire history and forest structural characteristics of adjacent Jeffrey pine
(Pinus jeffreyi) and upper montane forests was
investigated in the eastern Sierra Nevada at the University of California
Valentine Natural Reserve. Jeffrey pine forests had lower canopy cover, higher
amounts of fine fuels, and higher shrub cover when compared to upper montane
forest that were dominated by red fir (Abies magnifica).
Fire dates were determined using standard dendrochronolgy techniques from
fire-scarred Jeffrey pine, lodgepole pine
(Pinus contorta var. murrayana),
red f ir, and western white pine (Pinus monticola)
trees, snags, stumps, and downed logs. Fires were recorded from 1745 to 1889
and mean fire return intervals were 9 and 24.7 years for the Jeffrey pine and
upper montane forest types, respectively. The median fire return interval was
9.0 years for Jeffrey pine and 24.0 years for upper montane forests.
Significant differences were found in mean fire intervals and fire history
distributions between the two similarly sized fire history plots even though
they were only separated by approximately 100 m. This study suggests that fire
regimes can vary over very fine spatial scales. Differences in fire regimes
are likely due to differences in fuel beds and fire behavior.
Keywords: fuel load, spatial fire history, tree canopy cover, flammability, California
red fir, lodgepole pine.
Full text doi:10.1071/WF01008
© CSIRO 2001





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