Abstract

We studied the effects of experimental fire regimes, (dormant season fire, growing season fire, growing season mowing and control, i.e., no experimental treatment) on populations of the USA federally endangered, Schwalbea americana L. between 1992 and 1996. Although this species occurs in fire-maintained habitat in the Southeastern USA, there is concern about the use of fire for such rare populations. The purpose of the study was to examine how seasonal timing of fire and fire suppression affect population demography, flowering phenology and spatial distribution; to identify modes of persistence associated with fire regimes; and to determine if summer mowing provides a management alternative to fire. Fire-induced flowering was demonstrated in this species. Seasonal timing of burns appears to have relatively little consequence on population structure or spatial extent, but alters flowering phenology. Burning, regardless of season, resulted in increased population density and expansion in areal extent. Two possible mechanisms of persistence between fire events were identified including regression from reproductive stage to vegetative stage in the absence of fire and dormancy of individual plants for one or more seasons. Growing season mowing does not appear to be an adequate substitute for burning.

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