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Author(s):
C. Jason Williams, Frederick B. Pierson, Sayjro K. Nouwakpo, Patrick R. Kormos, Osama Z. Al-Hamdan, Mark A. Weltz
Year Published:

Cataloging Information

Topic(s):
Fire Ecology
Ecosystem Changes
Successional Changes

NRFSN number: 19828
FRAMES RCS number: 57452
Record updated:

Encroachment of sagebrush (Artemisia spp.) shrublands by pinyon (Pinus spp.) and juniper (Juniperus spp.) conifers (woodland encroachment) induces a shift from biotic‐controlled resource retention to abiotic‐driven loss of soil resources. This shift is driven by a coarsening of the vegetation structure with increasing dominance of site resources by trees. Competition between the encroaching trees and understory vegetation for limited soil and water resources facilitates extensive bare intercanopy area between trees and concomitant increases in runoff and erosion that, over time, propagate persistence of the shrubland‐to‐woodland conversion. We evaluated whether tree removal by burning can decrease late‐succession woodland ecohydrologic resilience by increasing vegetation and ground cover over a 9 yr period after fire, and whether the soil erosion feedback on late‐succession woodlands is reversible by burning. To address these questions, we employed a suite of vegetation and soil measurements and rainfall simulation and concentrated overland flow experiments across multiple plot scales on unburned and burned areas at two sagebrush sites in the later stages of woodland succession. Prior to burning, tree cover was approximately 28% at the sites and more than 70% of the area at the sites was intercanopy with depauperate understory vegetation and extensive bare ground (52-60% bare soil and rock). Burning initially increased bare ground across fine (<1 m2) to patch (tens of meters) scales, resulting in enhanced sediment availability at the fine scale, sustained high runoff and erosion within degraded intercanopies, amplified runoff and erosion from tree canopy areas, and amplified sediment delivery across fine‐ to patch‐scales. However, fire‐induced increases in grass cover over nine growing seasons improved infiltration, limited runoff and sediment delivery from the fine scale, and reduced intercanopy runoff and erosion at the patch scale. These changes reflect a switch in vegetation structure, triggered by burning and subsequent vegetation re‐establishment, and a shift to biotic control on runoff and erosion across spatial scales. The responses and persistence over the 9-yr period post‐fire at the two sites demonstrate that fire can decrease woodland ecohydrologic resilience by altering plant community physiognomy and thereby can reverse the soil erosion feedback on sagebrush shrublands in the later stages of woodland encroachment.

Citation

Williams, C. Jason; Pierson, Frederick B.; Nouwakpo, Sayjro K.; Kormos, Patrick R.; Al-Hamdan, Osama Z.; Weltz, Mark A. 2019. Long-term evidence for fire as an ecohydrologic threshold-reversal mechanism on woodland‐encroached sagebrush shrublands. Ecohydrology 12(4):e2086. https://doi.org/10.1002/eco.2086

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