scholarly journals Mortality, scarring, and growth in an oak woodland following prescribed fire and commercial thinning in the Ozark Highlands

2017 ◽  
Vol 403 ◽  
pp. 12-26 ◽  
Author(s):  
C.S. Kinkead ◽  
M.C. Stambaugh ◽  
J.M. Kabrick
Author(s):  
Robert A. York ◽  
Hunter Noble ◽  
Lenya Quinn-Davidson ◽  
John J. Battles

We used a prescribed fire study to demonstrate the concept of pyrosilviculture, defined here as a) using prescribed fire to meet management objectives or b) altering non-fire silvicultural treatments explicitly so that they can optimize the incorporation of prescribed fire in the future. The study included implementation of relatively hot prescribed burns in mixed-conifer forests that have been managed with gap-based silviculture. The fires burned through 12-, 22-, 32- and, 100-year old cohorts, thus enabling an analysis of stand age influences on fire effects. Mastication and pre-commercial thinning were assessed as pre-fire treatments in the 12-year-old stands. Post-burn mortality and crown scorch declined with stand age. There was a clear tradeoff between fuel consumption and high rates of tree damage and mortality in the 12-year-old stands. Masticated stands had higher levels of average crown scorch (78%) compared with pre-commercially thinned stands (52%). Mortality for all 12-year-old stands was high, as nearly half of the trees were dead one year after the fires. Giant sequoia and ponderosa pine had relatively high resistance to prescribed fire-related mortality. When applying the concept of pyrosilviculture, there could be opportunities to combine prescribed fire with regeneration harvests that create a variety of gap sizes in order to sustain both low fire hazard and to promote structural heterogeneity and sustainable age structures that may not be achieved with prescribed fires alone.


Author(s):  
Kent Keene ◽  
William Gulsby ◽  
Allison Colter ◽  
Darren A. Miller ◽  
Kristina Johannsen ◽  
...  

Commercial thinning and prescribed fire can improve habitat quality for white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) in lobolly pine (Pinus taeda) stands by increasing coverage of forage plants. However, the relationships among thinning intensity, prescribed fire, and deer forage have not been quantified. We estimated percent cover of deer forage plants in 5 loblolly pine stands thinned to 11 (low), 14 (medium), and 18 (high) m2/ha basal areas during 2017 in Georgia, USA. We applied prescribed fire during 2018. From years 1-2 post-treatment, cover of total deer forage increased 26% and 29% in the low and medium basal area treatments, respectively, compared to 19% in the high basal area treatment. Similarly, the increase in forb coverage was greater for the medium (13%) and low (11%) basal area treatments than the high (6%) basal area treatment. Increases in vine and bramble coverage were greater in unburned medium basal area units. Woody browse was not affected by any treatment. Our results suggest thinning loblolly pine stands to 14 m2/ha can increase coverage of deer forage plants during the first two growing seasons post-thin, but deer forage was not greater in stands thinned to <14 m2/ha two years post-thin.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Kathryn Marie Womack

Restoration of savanna and woodland ecosystems are high priorities for state and federal agencies in the Midwest and prescribed fire and mechanical tree thinning are the main tools used to restore these communities. Information on how bat species and their insect prey respond to restoration is needed to guide management decisions for species of conservation concern. There is a heightened urgency to collect demographic data during the 07 maternity season due to white-nose syndrome (WNS) and other threats to bat populations. Our objectives were to: 1) evaluate the performance of the n-mixture model for repeated count data and the general multinomial Poisson model for removal sampling (n-mixture model and removal model, respectively) for estimating bat abundance from simulated mist-net capture data, 2) determine the relationships between prescribed fire, vegetation structure, and site characteristics on insect abundance, and 3) determine the effect of restoration, vegetation structure, and landscape factors on bat species abundances across a gradient of savannas, woodlands, and non-managed forest in the Ozark Highlands of Missouri. We fit the n-mixture and removal models in the UNMARKED package in R, and simulated datasets that examined how both models would perform based on potential study design constraints, various probabilities of detection, and population sizes. We simulated 4 scenarios each based on 85 iterations on 1000 randomly generated datasets. We calculated relative bias (RB), mean absolute error (MAE), and mean absolute percent error (MA%E) from model predictions to evaluate model performance. Relative bias, MAE, and MA%E decreased as detection probability and bat abundance increased. Model fit was acceptably low when bat abundance was greater than 70, and detection probability was greater than 0.5 for n-mixture models. The removal model outperformed the n-mixture model in all scenarios except when detection probability was 0.05. The removal model correctly estimated bat abundance for 50 percent of simulated scenarios versus the n-mixture model's 3 out of 43. Utilization of the removal model using data from repeated mist-net surveys may allow resource managers and conservationists to better quantify how resource management and landscape composition affect bat species abundance and overall populations. We provide managers with evidence of the utility of the removal model to estimate bat abundances from repeated mist-net survey data while incorporating meaningful habitat, management, and landscape covariates. Furthermore, documenting changes in populations sizes during the 07 maternity season will enable improved conservation practices for species management. We sampled insects at 8 plots in 2014, and 4 plots in 2015 and 2016 within 250 m of each mist-net sites. We fit generalized linear mixed effects models to evaluate a priori hypotheses on the effects of savanna woodland restoration on insect abundances. Prescribed fire did affect insect abundances at plots surrounding each mist-net site. Insect plots burned 2 or 3 times within the last ten years had higher insect abundances for some insect response groups compared to non-managed plot. Year since a plot burned also affected insect abundances, with sites burned more recently within 3 years had lower insect abundances for some insect response groups and in others -- we found no relationship. We only evaluated insect Orders and did not examine specific families or species richness to understand how management affects diversity of insects. Temperature was the best predictor of insect abundances at plots for most response variables, and we found support for site aspect, and tree density by size classes. Managers should be mindful that different insect groups had different responses to prescribed fire, therefore a diversity of practices in the landscape will provide for more diverse insect prey Overall, restoration practices did not have a lasting negative effect on insect abundances, and some positive effects. We conducted mist-net surveys at 89 sites across the Ozark region of Missouri from 2014-2016, and collected demographic data on 4 bat species captured: northern longeared bat (Myotis septentrionalis), tri-colored bat (Perimyotis subflavus), evening bat (Nycticeius humeralis), and eastern red bat (Lasiurus borealis). We fit the removal model to evaluate multi-scale a priori hypotheses on the effects of restoration, landscape factors, and prey availability at sites that potentially affect either the detection or abundance of bats at sites. Top models for all four bat species highlighted the importance of evaluating multiple spatial scales in ecological studies. Overall, we found no evidence that restoration negatively affected any of the bat species investigated; although, northern long-eared bats abundance presented stronger positive relationship to percent forest and increased tree densities than to percent savanna-woodlands within 1km. Our study was the first to predict abundances from repeated count data from mist-net surveys during the 07 maternity season and accounting for varying detection probabilities. We did not find support for relationships between potential insect prey and bat abundances. Eastern red bats, tricolored, and evening bat abundances were positively related to prescribed fire and negatively to tree densities or percent canopy and therefore should respond positively to savanna and woodland restoration. Northern long-eared bat had higher abundances at sites with higher tree densities of pole and saw timber and eastern red bat and northern long-eared bat abundances was positively related to sites with higher percentage of forest and savanna-woodland habitat within 1 km of mist-net sites. Evening bat abundances was the greatest at sites that had higher fire frequencies within 1 km of a mist-net site. We suggest managers consider the tradeoffs among species in these abundance relationships when planning management and that restoration of savanna and woodlands, when part of a larger management goal to create heterogeneity of forest types, will likely promote higher abundances of all four bat species.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document