Abstract

BackgroundShrub-dominated ecosystems in California are widespread and provide invaluable ecosystem services to surrounding human-dominated communities. Yet shrublands, especially those at the wildland-urban interface, are at risk of degradation due to increasing wildfire frequency. Strategically placed fuel breaks are an important fuel management technique for reducing fire risk to neighboring communities and natural landscapes. Fuel breaks in shrub-dominated ecosystems are typically linear features where woody biomass is reduced, thereby providing fire suppression opportunities that limit fire spread. While fuel breaks are important for tactical response to fire, they can also affect the composition and structure of shrubland habitats. To understand the ecological changes resulting from fuel treatments in southern California chaparral, we measured vegetation change associated with fuel management techniques on a recently created fuel break established around the Lake Morena community on the Cleveland National Forest. The area was initially treated with cut and pile burning, then treated with herbicide, and 2 years later was subjected to short-term grazing by 1200 goats. The purpose of this study is to (1) evaluate the compositional and structural differences associated with fuel break creation and (2) quantify compositional shifts in herbaceous and woody vegetation caused by short-duration goat grazing as a method of fuel break maintenance.ResultsPlots on the fuel break and in untreated adjacent chaparral exhibited significantly different species assemblages. Total herbaceous cover (both native and non-native) was 92 times greater on the fuel break than in adjacent chaparral-dominated wildlands, and native shrub cover was 55.3 times greater in untreated adjacent chaparral than on the fuel break. Goats had a significant impact on reducing native and non-native herbaceous cover (87% reduction in cover, 92% reduction in height), but were ineffective at reducing the cover and height of most woody species such as Adenostoma fasciculatum, Eriogonum fasciculatum, Quercus berberidifolia, and Artemisia tridentata.ConclusionInitial fuel break creation was effective at reducing native woody cover and height, simultaneously giving rise to an abundance and diversity of native and non-native herbaceous species. Targeted goat grazing was successful at reducing herbaceous biomass but was ineffective at reducing woody biomass which is often one of the most important goals for fuel management in chaparral ecosystems. In areas where control of woody biomass is the primary objective, land managers should consider grazing duration and plant species composition when contemplating goats as a tool for fuel break maintenance.

Highlights

  • California is a global biodiversity hotspot, largely covered by sage- and chaparral-dominated shrublands (Underwood et al 2018)

  • The Non-metric multidimensional scaling (NMDS) ordination of species composition resulted in a cluster of treated plots within the fuel break that contain more herbaceous species, while the untreated plots contain a Measurement Measurement Method category

  • With warming temperatures and continued development into the wildland-urban interface, chaparral-dominated shrublands are threatened by an increase in wildfire frequency

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Summary

Introduction

California is a global biodiversity hotspot, largely covered by sage- and chaparral-dominated shrublands (Underwood et al 2018). Increasing temperatures and reduced precipitation are likely to exacerbate the size and frequency of catastrophic fires by altering the amount and distribution of fuels and creating a shorter fire-return interval than historically present (Steel et al 2015; Westerling and Bryant 2008) These altered fire regimes threaten biodiversity (Pausas and Keeley 2009) and increase fire risk to communities living in the wildland-urban interface (Syphard et al 2007). Shrub-dominated ecosystems in California are widespread and provide invaluable ecosystem services to surrounding human-dominated communities Shrublands, especially those at the wildland-urban interface, are at risk of degradation due to increasing wildfire frequency. The purpose of this study is to (1) evaluate the compositional and structural differences associated with fuel break creation and (2) quantify compositional shifts in herbaceous and woody vegetation caused by short-duration goat grazing as a method of fuel break maintenance

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