Abstract

In many northern forest ecosystems, the postfire transition from a closed-crown forest to open woodland is often observed but poorly understood. This paper looks at the effect of interactions between surficial deposit, climate, and fire cycle on postfire forest recovery within a large territory (190 000 km 2 ) of the boreal forest of eastern Canada. Postfire recov- ery was estimated using the time elapsed to move from the burnt stage to the regenerated stage and the young forest stage. The main objective was to determine if forests situated in dry regions (characterized by a high proportion of dry coarse sur- ficial deposits, low precipitation, and short fire cycle) tend to reestablish more slowly after fire, obtaining a more open stand compared with wetter regions characterized by a longer fire cycle. To identify the best explanatory model for postfire recov- ery, multinomial logistic regressions with the Akaike information criterion were conducted using a combination of physico- climatic factors. Our best model suggests that the most significant predictors of postfire recovery are time since fire (c 2 = 1370.06), surficial deposit type (c 2 = 651.95), the Canadian Drought Code (c 2 = 247.75), and the growing season precipi- tation (c 2 = 102.80). Fast recovery and dense forest regeneration are associated with subhydric till deposits only in the re- gions characterized by a long fire cycle (>500 years). Conversely, slow regeneration conducive to a sparse young forest was usually associated with regions characterized by a short fire cycle (<200 years) underlain by dry coarse deposits such as juxtaglacial but also mesic deposits in some cases. Our results also show that slow recovery and reduced forest regeneration are most likely to occur following fires that occurred in dry years, regardless of the deposit type and region.

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