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Modelling the recovery of an annual savanna grass following a fire‐induced crash
Author(s) -
LONSDALE W. M.,
BRAITHWAITE R. W.,
LANE A. M.,
FARMER J.
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
australian journal of ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1442-9993
pISSN - 0307-692X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1442-9993.1998.tb00761.x
Subject(s) - perennial plant , forb , dry season , sorghum , vegetation (pathology) , tropical savanna climate , agronomy , population , litter , wet season , growing season , ecology , fire ecology , geography , plant litter , environmental science , biology , grassland , ecosystem , demography , medicine , pathology , sociology
The native annual Sorghum populations of the Australian wet‐dry tropics are highly resilient to dry season fires. During the early wet season, however, fires that occur after the new grass population has emerged can cause catastrophic population crashes. We examined savanna plots that had been burnt in this way, and compared them with adjacent unburnt plots. We found that Sorghum densities in the burnt plots were lower on average by a factor of 10, but that some fires had reduced the density only to one‐third of the unburnt plots. It is not clear whether these differences relate directly to site or seasonal factors, or to differences in the way the burning was carried out. Other vegetation components responded to the fires differently: forbs (dicotyledonous herbs) increased in cover, while perennial grasses, woody plants, and overall species richness, were not significantly affected. The amount of leaf litter declined. A population model for Sorghum based on the demography of unburnt populations predicted that they should recover from a wet season burn, taking 7–16 years to return to normal densities. However, the actual field populations did not seem to be recovering, suggesting that wet season fires not only lower densities, but may also fundamentally change population processes in these annual grasses.