Abstract

BackgroundPrescribed fire is increasingly used to accomplish management goals in fire-adapted systems, yet our understanding of effects on non-target organisms remains underdeveloped. Terricolous lichens in the genus Cladonia P. Browne, particularly cushion-forming reindeer lichens belonging to Cladonia subgenus Cladina Nyl., fit into this category, being characteristic of fire-adapted ecosystems, yet highly vulnerable to damage or consumption during burns. Moreover, inherently slow dispersal and growth rates raise questions about how to conserve these taxa in the context of fire-mediated restoration management. This research was undertaken to identify factors that contribute to Cladonia persistence within areas subject to repeated burning and involved tracking the fate of 228 spatially isolated individuals distributed across seven sites previously burned zero to two times. Site selection was determined by edaphic factors associated with a rare inland dune woodland community type known to support relatively high densities of Cladonia.ResultsEvaluated across all sites, the post-burn condition of Cladonia subtenuis (Abbayes) Mattick samples, categorized as intact (32%), fragmented (33%), or consumed (36%) individuals, approximated a uniform distribution. However, their status was highly variable at the different sites, where from 0 to 70% were assessed as intact and 11 to 60% consumed. Machine-learning statistical techniques were used to identify the factors most strongly associated with fire damage, drawing from variables describing the proximate fuel bed, growth substrate, and fire weather. The final descriptive model was dominated by variables characterizing the understory fuel matrix.ConclusionsAreas with highly contiguous fuels dominated by pyrogenic pine needles were most likely to result in consumption of individual Cladonia, whereas those growing in areas with low fuel continuity or in areas dominated by hardwood litter were more likely to persist (intact or as fragments). Further, substrates including bare soil and moss mats afforded more protection than coarse woody debris or leaf litter in settings where fuels were both contiguous and highly flammable. Our findings describe the characteristics of within-site fire refugia, the abundance of which may be enhanced over time through restoration and maintenance treatments including thinning, promotion of mixed-species overstory composition, and periodic burning. Because lichens contribute to, and are considered reliable indicators of forest health, fire-based restoration management efforts will benefit from improved understanding of how these vulnerable organisms are able to persist.

Highlights

  • Prescribed fire is increasingly used to accomplish management goals in fire-adapted systems, yet our understanding of effects on non-target organisms remains underdeveloped

  • Particularmente los que forman pasturas en cojín para alimento de los renos y que pertenecen al género Cladonia subgénero Cladina Nyl., encajan dentro de esta categoría, siendo característicos de ecosistemas adaptados al fuego, aunque altamente vulnerables al daño o al consumo por el fuego durante los incendios

  • We did not set out to constrain the sample to a single Cladonia species, all individuals included in the study were identified as C. subtenuis (Abbayes) Mattick, which is widely distributed in the Mid-Atlantic Coastal Plain (MACP) and southeastern US (Lendemer and Noell 2018)

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Summary

Introduction

Prescribed fire is increasingly used to accomplish management goals in fire-adapted systems, yet our understanding of effects on non-target organisms remains underdeveloped. While component species usually exhibit a wide range of adaptations and mechanisms that allow them to tolerate or avoid damage when confronted by fire, the combination of factors that allow organisms without these protections to persist is less well understood (e.g., Russell 1999; Swengel 2001; Fontaine and Kennedy 2012; Perry 2012) Despite these knowledge gaps that potentially constrain our ability to conduct effective fire-based management, an arguably more compelling view holds that the diminishment of habitat values resulting from fire exclusion represents an overriding concern (Varner and Kush 2004; Nowacki and Abrams 2008; Slapcinsky et al 2010). This range of responses has been attributed to differences in aspects of fire regimes including intensity and return interval (Johansson and Reich 2005; O’Bryan et al 2009; Zouaoui et al 2014; Wills et al 2018), selective effects of fire on competing vegetation and habitat structure (Hawkes and Menges 1996; O’Bryan et al 2009), and the existence of unburned patches or other refugia (Holt and Severns 2005; Johansson et al 2006; Ray et al 2015)

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