Abstract

C4 grasses coevolved with fires, employing specialized adaptive traits to recover from recurrent fires of varying regimes, thereby maintaining plant diversity and plant population stability. However, the knowledge of how C4 bunchgrasses recover from varying fire return intervals (FRIs) is limited. Biomass, tillering, flowering, and growth-related traits of Digitaria eriantha, Themeda triandra, Sporobolus fimbriatus, and Cymbopogon plurinodis were assessed in 0- (unburned), 1-, 2-, and 4-year FRIs, each applied in two 0.5 ± 0.01 ha plots from 1980–2022 at the University of Fort Hare research farm, South Africa. FRIs and grass species interacted significantly on biomass production, crown size, tiller production, and reproductive tillers, with responses varying interspecifically depending on the FRI. Cymbopogon plurinodis attained higher total biomass in 1-year FRI, whereas T. triandra produced relatively low biomass in all FRIs compared to 0-year FRI. Nonetheless, T. triandra attained nearly two to three-fold more tillers per plant and three to five-fold more reproductive tillers in 2- and 4-year FRIs compared to other FRIs. Similarly, S. fimbriatus had two-fold more reproductive tillers in 2-year FRIs compared to 0- and 1-year FRIs. We deduce that C4 bunchgrasses respond differentially under recurrent fires depending on the fire return interval, with 2- and 4-year FRIs promoting vegetative and sexual regeneration by enhancing tillering and flowering.

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