Register      Login
Australian Journal of Botany Australian Journal of Botany Society
Southern hemisphere botanical ecosystems
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Integrating demography and fire management: an example from Florida scrub

Eric S. Menges
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

Archbold Biological Station, PO Box 2057, Lake Placid, FL 33862, USA. Email: emenges@archbold-station.org

Australian Journal of Botany 55(3) 261-272 https://doi.org/10.1071/BT06020
Submitted: 4 February 2006  Accepted: 13 June 2006   Published: 18 May 2007

Abstract

In this work, I have used life-history and demographic data to define fire return intervals for several types of Florida scrub, a xeric shrubland where fire is the dominant ecological disturbance but where fire suppression is a major issue. The datasets combine chronosequence and longitudinal approaches at community and population levels. Resprouting shrubs, which dominate most types of Florida scrub, recover rapidly after fires (although their limits under frequent fires are not well known) and also increasingly dominate long-unburned areas. These dominant shrubs can prosper over a range of fire return intervals. Obligate-seeding scrub plants, which often have persistent seed banks, can be eliminated by frequent fire but often decline with infrequent fire. Population viability analyses of habitat specialists offer more precision in suggesting ranges of appropriate fire return intervals. For two types of Florida scrub (rosemary scrub and oak–hickory scrub), plant-population viability analyses narrow the interval and suggest more frequent fires than do previous recommendations, at intervals of 15–30 and 5–12 years, respectively. Variation in fire regimes in time and space (pyrodiversity) is recommended as a bet-hedging fire-management strategy and to allow co-existence of species with disparate life histories.


Acknowledgements

I thank Carl Weekley, Marcia Rickey, Pedro Quintana-Ascencio, numerous collaborators, research assistants, graduate students and interns in my laboratory who have worked with me during the past 18 years, as well as Hilary Swain, Kevin Main and other staff at Archbold Biological Station who have facilitated and supported this research. This paper was improved by comments from Warren Abrahamson, Pedro Quintana-Ascencio, Beth Richards, and Carl Weekley and by discussions on fire management with David Keith. Funding for this research has come from the National Science Foundation (DEB98-15370), The Nature Conservancy, Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, Florida Division of Plant Industry, Florida Division of Forestry (Plant Conservation Program), US Fish and Wildlife Service, and the Garden Club of America.


References


Abrahamson WG (1984) Post-fire recovery of Florida Lake Wales Ridge vegetation. American Journal of Botany 71, 9–21.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Abrahamson WG (1995) Habitat distribution and competitive neighborhoods of two Florida palmettos. Bulletin of Torrey Botanical Club 122, 1–14.
Crossref |
open url image1

Abrahamson WG (1999) Episodic reproduction in two fire-prone palms, Serenoa repens and Sabal etonia (Palmae). Ecology 80, 100–115.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Abrahamson WG, Abrahamson CR (1996) Effects of fire on long-unburned Florida uplands. Journal of Vegetation Science 7, 565–574.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Abrahamson WG, Abrahamson CR (2002) Persistent palmettos: effects of the 2000–2001 drought on Serenoa repens and Sabal etonia. Florida Scientist 65, 281–292. open url image1

Abrahamson WG, Johnson AF, Layne JN, Peroni PA (1984) Vegetation of the Archbold Biological Station, Florida: an example of the southern Lake Wales Ridge. Florida Scientist 47, 209–251. open url image1

Andersen AN, Braithwaite RW, Cook GD, Corbett LK, Williams RJ, Douglas MM, Gill AM, Setterfield SA, Muller WJ (1998) Fire research for conservation management in tropical savannas: introducing the Kapalga fire experiment. Australian Journal of Ecology 23, 95–110.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Bell CR , Taylor BJ (1982) ‘Florida wildflowers and roadside plants.’ (Laurel Hill Press: Chapel Hill, NC)

Bell DT (2001) Ecological response syndromes in the flora of southwestern Australia: fire resprouters versus reseeders. Botanical Review 67, 417–440. open url image1

Bellingham PJ, Sparrow AD (2000) Resprouting as a life history strategy in woody plant communities. Oikos 89, 409–416.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Boerner REJ (1981) Forest structure dynamics following wildfire and prescribed burning in the New Jersey pine barrens. American Midland Naturalist 105, 321–333.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Bond WJ, Archibald S (2003) Confronting complexity: fire policy choices in South African savanna parks. International Journal of Wildland Fire 12, 381–389.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Bond WJ, Keeley JE (2005) Fire as a global ‘herbivore’: the ecology and evolution of flammable ecosystems. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 20, 387–394.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | PubMed | open url image1

Bond WJ, Midgley JJ (2001) Ecology of sprouting in woody plants: the persistence niche. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 16, 45–51.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | PubMed | open url image1

Bradstock RA, Kenny BJ (2003) An application of plant functional types to fire management in a conservation reserve in southeastern Australia. Journal of Vegetation Science 14, 345–354.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Breininger DR, Burgman MA, Stith BM (1999) Influence of habitat quality, catastrophes, and population size on extinction risk of the Florida scrub-jay. Wildlife Society Bulletin 27, 810–822. open url image1

Breininger DR, Duncan BW, Dominy NJ (2002) Relationships between fire frequency and vegetation type in pine flatwoods of east-central Florida, USA. Natural Areas Journal 22, 186–193. open url image1

Brockett BH, Biggs HC, van Wilgen BW (2001) A patch mosaic burning system for conservation areas in southern African savannas. International Journal of Wildland Fire 10, 169–183.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Burgman MA, Lamont BB (1992) A stochastic model for the viability of Banksia cuneata populations: environmental, demographic, genetic effects. Journal of Applied Ecology 29, 719–727.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Canadell J, Lopez-Soria L (1998) Lignotuber reserves support regrowth following clipping of two Mediterranean shrubs. Functional Ecology 12, 31–38.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Carrington ME (1999) Post-fire seedling establishment in Florida sand pine scrub. Journal of Vegetation Science 10, 403–412.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Carrington ME, Keeley JE (1999) Comparison of post-fire seedling establishment between scrub communities in Mediterranean and non-mediterranean climate ecosystems. Journal of Ecology 87, 1025–1036.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Caswell H, Kaye TN (2001) Stochastic demography and conservation of an endangered perennial plant (Lomatium bradshawii) in a dynamic fire regime. Advances in Ecological Research 32, 1–49.
Crossref |
open url image1

Cavender-Bares J, Kitajima K, Bazzaz FA (2004) Multiple trait association in relation to habitat differentiation among 17 Floridian oak species. Ecological Monographs 74, 635–662. open url image1

Clarke PJ, Knox KJE, Willis KE, Campbell M (2005) Landscape patterns of woody plant response to crown fire: disturbance and productivity influence sprouting ability. Journal of Ecology 93, 544–555.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Cruz A, Perez B, Quintana JR, Moreno JM (2002) Resprouting in the Mediterranean-type shrub Erica australis affected by soil resource availability. Journal of Vegetation Science 13, 641–650.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

De Groot WJ, Wein RW (2004) Effects of fire severity and season of burn on Betula glandulosa growth dynamics. International Journal of Wildland Fire 13, 287–295.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Drewa PB (2003) Effects of fire season and intensity on Prosopis glandulosa Torr. var. glandulosa. International Journal of Wildland Fire 12, 147–157.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Drewa PB, Platt WJ, Moser EB (2002) Fire effects on resprouting of shrubs in headwaters of southeastern longleaf pine savannas. Ecology 83, 755–767.
Crossref |
open url image1

Duncan BW, Schmalzer PA (2004) Anthropogenic influences on potential fire spread in a pyrogenic ecosystem of Florida, USA. Landscape Ecology 19, 153–165.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Duncan BW, Boyle S, Breininger DR, Schmalzer PA (1999) Coupling past management practice and historic landscape change on John F. Kennedy Space Center, Florida. Landscape Ecology 14, 291–309.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Elias TS (1987) ‘Trees of North America.’ (Gramercy Publishing Company: New York)

Enright NJ, Marsula R, Lamont BB, Wissel C (1998) The ecological significance of canopy seed storage in fire-prone environments: a model for resprouting shrubs. Journal of Ecology 86, 960–973.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Fensham RJ, Fairfax RJ, Butler DW, Bowman DMJS (2003) Effects of fire and drought in a tropical eucalypt savanna colonized by rain forest. Journal of Biogeography 30, 1405–1414.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Fernald EA , Purdum ED (1992) ‘Atlas of Florida.’ (University of Florida Press: Gainesville, FL)

Franklin J, Syphard AD, He HS, Mladenoff DJ (2005) Altered fire regimes affect landscape patterns of plant succession in the foothills and mountains of southern California. Ecosystems 8, 885–898.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Gibson DJ, Hartnett DC, Merrill GLS (1990) Fire temperature heterogeneity in contrasting fire prone habitats: Kansas tallgrass prairie and Florida sandhill. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 117, 349–356.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Gill AM, McCarthy MA (1998) Intervals between prescribed fires in Australia: what intrinsic variation should apply? Biological Conservation 85, 161–169.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Greenberg CH (2003) Vegetation recovery and stand structure following a prescribed stand-replacing burn in sand pine scrub. Natural Areas Journal 23, 141–151. open url image1

Gross K, Lockwood III, Frost CC, Morris WF (1998) Modeling controlled burning and trampling reduction for conservation of Hudsonia montana. Conservation Biology 12, 1291–1301.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Guerin DN (1993) Oak dome clonal structure and fire ecology in a Florida longleaf pine dominated community. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 120, 107–114.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Gurvich DE, Enrico L, Cingolani AM (2005) Linking plant functional traits with post-fire sprouting vigour in woody species in central Argentina. Austral Ecology 30, 789–796.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Hall DW (1993) ‘Illustrated plants of Florida and the coastal plain.’ (Maupin House: Gainesville, FL)

Hammill KA, Bradstock FA, Allaway WG (1998) Post-fire seed dispersal and species re-establishment in Proteaceous heath. Australian Journal of Botany 46, 407–419.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Hierro JL, Menges ES (2002) Fire intensity and shrub regeneration in palmetto-dominated flatwoods of central Florida. Florida Scientist 65, 51–61. open url image1

Hunter ME, Menges ES (2002) Allelopathic effects and root distribution of Ceratiola ericoides (Empetraceae) on seven rosemary scrub species American Journal of Botany 89, 1113–1118. open url image1

Johnson AF (1982) Some demographic characteristics of the Florida rosemary Ceratiola ericoides Michx. American Midland Naturalist 108, 170–174.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Johnson AF, Abrahamson WG, McCrea KD (1986) Comparison of biomass recovery after fire of a seeder (Ceratiola ericoides) and a sprouter (Quercus inopina) species from south central Florida. American Midland Naturalist 116, 423–428.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Keeley JE (1992) Demographic structure of California chaparral in the long-term absence of fire. Journal of Vegetation Science 3, 79–90.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Keeley JE, Fotheringham CJ, Baer-Keeley M (2005) Determinants of postfire recovery and succession in Mediterranean-climate shrublands of California. Ecological Applications 15, 1515–1534. open url image1

Keith DA (2002) Population dynamics of an endangered heathland shrub, Epacris stuartii (Epacridaceae): recruitment, establishment and survival. Austral Ecology 27, 67–76.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Keith DA , Williams JE , Woinarski JCZ (2002) Fire management and biodiversity conservation: key approaches and principles. In ‘Flammable Australia: the fire regimes and biodiversity of a continent’. (Eds RA Bradstock, JE Williams, AM Gill) pp. 401–425. (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge)

Knox KJE, Morrison DA (2005) Effects of inter-fire intervals on the reproductive output of resprouters and obligate seeders in the Proteaceae. Austral Ecology 30, 407–413.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Lamont BB, Markey A (1995) Biogeography of fire-killed and resprouting Banksia species in southwestern Australia. Australian Journal of Botany 43, 283–303.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Lamont BB, Wiens D (2003) Are seed set and speciation rates always low among species that resprout after fire, and why? Evolutionary Ecology 17, 277–292.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Landres PB, Morgan P, Swanson FJ (1999) Overview of the use of natural variability concepts in managing ecological systems. Ecological Applications 9, 1179–1188.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Lee P (2004) The impact of burn intensity from wildfires on seed and vegetative banks, and emergent understory in aspen-dominated boreal forests. Canadian Journal of Botany 82, 1468–1480.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Lloret F, Lopez-Soria L (1993) Resprouting of Erica multiflora after experimental fire treatments. Journal of Vegetation Science 4, 367–374.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Lloret F, Estevan H, Vayreda J, Terradas J (2005) Fire regenerative syndromes of forest woody species across fire and climatic gradients. Oecologia 146, 461–468.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | PubMed | open url image1

Malanson GP (1985) Simulation of competition between alternative shrub life history strategies through recurrent fires. Ecological Modelling 27, 271–283.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Martin RE , Sapsis DB (1992) Fires as agents of biodiversity: pyrodiversity promotes biodiversity. In ‘Proceedings of the symposium on biodiversity in northwestern California’. (Ed. HM Kerner) pp. 150–157. (Wildland Resources Center, University of California: Berkeley, CA)

Matlack GR (1997) Resource allocation among clonal shoots of the fire-tolerant shrub Gaylussacia baccata. Oikos 80, 509–518.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Matlack GR, Gibson DJ, Good RE (1993) Clonal propagation, local disturbance, and structure of vegetation: ericaceous shrubs in the pine barrens of New Jersey. Biological Conservation 63, 1–8.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

McCarthy MA, Possingham HP, Gill AM (2001) Using stochastic dynamic programming to determine optimal fire management for Banksia ornata. Journal of Applied Ecology 38, 585–592.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

McConnell K, Menges ES (2002) The effects of fire and treatments that mimic fire on the Florida endemic scrub buckwheat (Eriogonum longifolium Nutt. var. gnaphalifolium Gand.). Natural Areas Journal 22, 194–201. open url image1

McFarland DC (1988) Fire and vegetation composition and structure of subtropical heathlands in south-eastern Queensland. Australian Journal of Botany 36, 533–546.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Menges ES (1999) Ecology and conservation of Florida scrub. In ‘The savanna, barren, and rock outcrop communities of North America’. (Eds RC Anderson, JS Fralish, J Baskin) pp. 7–22. (Cambridge University Press: London)

Menges ES, Hawkes CV (1998) Interactive effects of fire and microhabitat on plants of Florida scrub. Ecological Applications 8, 935–946.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Menges ES, Kohfeldt NM (1995) Life history strategies of Florida scrub plants in relation to fire. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 122, 282–297.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Menges ES, Quintana-Ascencio PF (2004) Population viability with fire in Eryngium cuneifolium: deciphering a decade of demographic data. Ecological Monographs 74, 79–99. open url image1

Menges ES, Abrahamson WG, Givens KT, Gallo NP, Layne JN (1993) Twenty years of vegetation change in five unburned Florida plant communities. Journal of Vegetation Science 4, 375–386.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Menges ES, McIntyre PF, Finer MS, Goss E, Yahr R (1999) Microhabitat of the narrow Florida scrub endemic Dicerandra christmanii, with comparisons to its congener D. frutescens. Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society 126, 24–31.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Menges ES, Dolan RW, Yahr R, Gordon DR (2001) Comparative genetics of seven plants endemic to Florida’s Lake Wales Ridge. Castanea 66, 98–114. open url image1

Menges ES, Quintana-Ascencio PF, Weekley CW, Gaoue OG (2006) Population viability analysis and fire return intervals for an endemic Florida scrub mint. Biological Conservation 127, 115–127.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Midgley JJ (1996) Why the world’s vegetation is not totally dominated by resprouting plants: because resprouters and shorter than reseeders. Ecography 19, 92–95.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Moreno JM, Oechel WC (1991) Fire intensity and herbivory effects on postfire resprouting of Adenostema fasciculatum in southern California chaparral. Oecologia 85, 429–433.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Morrison DA, Cary GJ, Pengelly SM, Ross DG, Mullins BJ, Thomas CR, Anderson TS (1995) Effects of fire frequency on plant species composition of sandstone communities in the Sydney region: inter-fire interval and time-since-fire. Australian Journal of Ecology 20, 239–247.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Myers RL (1990) Scrub and High Pine. In ‘Ecosystems of Florida’. (Eds RL Myers, JJ Ewel) pp. 150–193. (The University of Central Florida Press: Gainesville, FL)

Myers RL, White DL (1987) Landscape history and changes in sandhill vegetation in north-central and south-central Florida. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 114, 21–32.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Nelson G (1996) ‘The shrubs and woody vines of Florida.’ (Pineapple Press: Sarasota, FL)

Odion D, Tyler C (2002) Are long fire-free periods needed to maintain the endangered, fire-recruiting shrub Arctostaphylos morroensis (Ericaceae)? Conservation Ecology 6, open url image1

Odion DC, Frost EJ, Strittholt JR, Jiang H, Dellasala DA, Moritz MA (2004) Patterns of fire severity and forest conditions in the western Klamath Mountains, California. Conservation Biology 18, 927–936.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Olano JM, Menges ES, Martinez E (2005) Carbohydrate storage patterns in five resprouting scrub plants across a fire gradient. New Phytologist 170, 99–106.
Crossref |
open url image1

Olson MS, Platt WJ (1995) Effects of habitat and growing season fires on resprouting of shrubs in longleaf pine savannas. Vegetatio 119, 101–118.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Ostertag R, Menges ES (1994) Patterns of reproductive effort with time since last fire in Florida scrub plants. Journal of Vegetation Science 5, 303–310.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Outcalt KW , Greenberg CH (1998) A stand-replacement prescribed burn in sand pine scrub. In ‘Fire in ecosystem management: shifting the paradigm from suppression to prescription. Tall timbers fire ecology conference proceedings No. 20’. (Eds TL Pruden, LA Brennan) pp. 141–145. (Tall Timbers Research Station: Tallahassee, FL)

Owen W, Brown H (2005) The effects of fire on rare plants. Fire Management Today 65, 13–15. open url image1

Pausas JG, Verdu M (2005) Plant persistence traits in fire-prone ecosystems of the Mediterranean basin: a phylogenetic approach. Oikos 109, 196–202.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Pausas JG, Bradstock RA, Keith DA, Keeley JE, The GCTE (Global Change of Terrestrial Ecosystems) Fire Network (2004) Plant functional traits in relation to fire in crown-fire ecosystems. Ecology 85, 1085–1100. open url image1

Pausas JG, Keeley JE, Verdu M (2006) Inferring differential evolutionary processes of plant persistent traits in northern hemisphere Mediterranean fire-prone ecosystems. Journal of Ecology 94, 31–39.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Petru M, Menges ES (2003) Seedling establishment in natural and experimental Florida scrub gaps. Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society 130, 89–100. open url image1

Pfab MF, Witkowski ETF (2000) A simple population viability analysis of the critically endangered Euphorbia clivicola R.A. Dyer under four management scenarios. Biological Conservation 96, 263–270.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Potash LL, Agee JK (1998) The effect of fire on red heather (Phyllodoce empetriformis). Canadian Journal of Botany 76, 428–433.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Pyne SJ (1997) ‘World fire: the culture of fire on earth.’ (University of Washington Press: Seattle)

Quintana-Ascencio PF, Morales-Hernandez M (1997) Fire-mediated effects of shrubs, lichens, and herbs on the demography of Hypericum cumulicola in patchy Florida scrub. Oecologia 112, 263–271.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Quintana-Ascencio PF, Menges ES, Weekley CW (2003) A fire-explicit population viability analysis of Hypericum cumulicola in Florida rosemary scrub. Conservation Biology 17, 433–449.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Regan HM, Auld TD, Keith DA, Burgman MA (2003) The effects of fire and predators on the long-term persistence of an endangered shrub, Grevillea caleyi. Biological Conservation 109, 73–83.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Russell-Smith J, Ryan PG, Cheal DC (2002) Fire regimes and the conservation of sandstone heath in monsoonal northern Australia: frequency, interval, and patchiness. Biological Conservation 104, 91–106.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Russell-Smith J, Whitehead PJ, Cook GD, Hoare JL (2003) Response of Eucalyptus-dominated savanna to frequent fires: lessons from Munmarlary, 1973–1996. Ecological Monographs 73, 349–375. open url image1

Satterthwaite WS, Quintana-Ascencio PF, Menges ES (2002) Assessing scrub buckwheat population viability in relation to fire using multiple modeling techniques. Ecological Applications 12, 1672–1687. open url image1

Schmalzer PA (2003) Growth and recovery of oak-saw palmetto scrub through ten years after fire. Natural Areas Journal 23, 5–13. open url image1

Schmalzer PA, Hinkle CR (1996) Biomass and nutrients in aboveground vegetation and soils of Florida oak-saw palmetto scrub. Castanea 61, 168–193. open url image1

Taylor WK (1998) ‘Florida wildflowers in their natural communities.’ (University Press of Florida: Gainesville, FL)

Thaxton JM, Platt WJ (2006) Small scale fuel variation alters fire intensity and shrub abundance in a pine savanna. Ecology 87, 1331–1337. open url image1

Turner MG, Romme WH, Gardner RH, Hargrove WW (1997) Effects of fire size and pattern on early succession in Yellowstone National Park. Ecological Monographs 67, 411–433.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Turner MG, Romme WH, Reed RA, Tuskan GA (2003) Post-fire aspen seedling recruitment across the Yellowstone (USA) landscape. Landscape Ecology 18, 127–140.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

US Fish and Wildlife Service (1999) ‘Multi-species recovery plan for the threatened and endangered species of South Florida.’ (US Fish and Wildlife Service: Vero Beach, FL)

Van Mantgem P, Schwartz M, Keifer M (2001) Monitoring fire effects for managed burns and wildfires: coming to terms with pseudoreplication. Natural Areas Journal 21, 266–273. open url image1

Van Wilgen BW, Richardson DM, Seydack AHW (1994) Managing fynbos for biodiversity: constraints and options in a fire-prone environment. South African Journal of Science 90, 322–329. open url image1

Vesk PA, Westoby M (2004) Sprouting ability across diverse disturbances and vegetation types worldwide. Journal of Ecology 92, 310–320.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | open url image1

Wally A, Menges ES, Weekley CW (2006) Comparison of three devices for estimating fire temperatures in ecological studies. Applied Vegetation Science 9, 97–108. open url image1

Weekley CW, Menges ES (2003) Species and vegetation responses to prescribed fire in a long-unburned, endemic-rich Lake Wales Ridge scrub. Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society 130, 265–282. open url image1

Whelan RJ (1995) ‘The ecology of fire.’ (Cambridge University Press: New York)

Woolfenden GE , Fitzpatrick JW (1996) Florida scrub-jay (Aphelocoma coerulescens). In ‘The birds of North America. No. 228’. (Eds A Poole, F Gill) pp. 1–28. (The Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia and the American Ornithologists Union: Washington, DC)