Abstract

The undisturbed condition in the shrub and herb layers of a Populus tremuloides woodland in southern Ontario was characterized by a mosaic of two main vegetation groupings, one being relatively species rich and the other species poor. Their distribution was related chiefly to two environmental variables: (a) relative degree of shrub canopy cover, and (b) microtopographic position. Species-poor vegetation was associated with those sites having a closed shrub canopy and low, wet positions on the microtopographic gradient.Prescribed burning added a further dimension to the clumped pattern and species richness of the vegetation. Microscale heterogeneity created by the burns tended to increase species richness, but in general, richness was reduced by burning. Rapid postburn changes in the vegetation were largely restricted to shifts in dominance by the three most abundant species; Cornus stolonifera Michx., Calamagrostis canadensis (Michx.) Beauv., and Carex stricta var. strictior Lam. The changes in the dominants after burning appeared to be short lived but affected the overall structure of the shrub and herb vegetation.

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