Abstract

BackgroundPrescribed fire in Eastern deciduous forests has been understudied relative to other regions in the United States. In Pennsylvania, USA, prescribed fire use has increased more than five-fold since 2009, yet forest response has not been extensively studied. Due to variations in forest composition and the feedback between vegetation and fire, Pennsylvania deciduous forests may burn and respond differently than forests across the eastern US. We measured changes in forest structure and composition up to eight years after prescribed fire in a hardwood forest of the Ridge and Valley region of the Appalachian Mountains in central Pennsylvania.ResultsWithin five years post fire, tree seedling density increased more than 72% while sapling density decreased by 90%, midstory density decreased by 46%, and overstory response varied. Following one burn in the mixed-oak unit, overstory tree density decreased by 12%. In the aspen–oak unit, where pre-fire harvesting and two burns occurred, overstory tree density increased by 25%. Not all tree species responded similarly and post-fire shifts in species relative abundance occurred in sapling and seedling size classes. Abundance of red maple and cherry species decreased, whereas abundance of sassafras, quaking aspen, black oak, and hickory species increased.ConclusionsForest composition plays a key role in the vegetation–fire relationship and localized studies are necessary to measure forest response to prescribed fire. Compositional shifts in tree species were most pronounced in the aspen–oak unit where pre-fire overstory thinning and two prescribed fires were applied and significant structural changes occurred in all stands after just one burn. Increases in fire-tolerant tree species combined with reductions in fire-intolerant species highlight the role of prescribed fire in meeting management objectives such as altering forest structure and composition to improve game habitat in mid-Atlantic hardwood forests.

Highlights

  • Prescribed fire in Eastern deciduous forests has been understudied relative to other regions in the United States

  • Prescribed fire is relatively understudied in the eastern deciduous forests of the United States (Stambaugh et al 2015; Varner et al 2016), yet fire is increasingly used for management purposes

  • Study site Fire effects were studied on Pennsylvania State Game Lands 176 (SGL176) in the Ridge and Valley Physiographic Province of central Pennsylvania (40.7° N, 77.9° W)

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Summary

Introduction

In the seven years following the legislation, the annual number of prescribed fires in Pennsylvania increased from 56 to 222, and area burned increased from 1107 to 7532 ha (PA DCNR 2015; National Interagency Fire Center 2017), many hectares burning only once due to the barriers forest managers face when planning and implementing prescribed fires (Smithwick et al 2020). This influx of prescribed fire is introducing disturbance to areas that have been fire free for about 80 years (Klimkos 2017), and localized forest response has not been extensively studied

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