To access the full text documents, please follow this link: http://hdl.handle.net/10459.1/68419

History matters: previous land use changes determine post-fire vegetation recovery in forested Mediterranean landscapes
Puerta-Piñero, Carolina; Espelta Morral, Josep Maria; Sánchez Humanes, Belén; Rodrigo, Anselm; Coll Mir, Lluís; Brotons, Lluís
Land use changes and shifts in disturbance regimes (e.g. wildfires) are recognized worldwide as two of the major drivers of the current global change in terrestrial ecosystems. We expect that, in areas with large-scale land use changes, legacies from previous land uses persist and affect current ecosystem responses to climate-associated disturbances like fire. This study analyses whether post-fire vegetation dynamics may differ according to specific historical land use histories in a Mediterranean forest landscape of about 60,000 ha that was burnt by extensive fires. For that, we assessed land use history of the whole area through the second half of the XXth century, and evaluated the post-fire regeneration success in terms of: (i) forest cover and (ii) tree species composition (biotic-dispersed, resprouter species, Quercus spp. vs. wind-dispersed species with or without fire-resistant seed bank, Pinus spp.). Results showed that stable forest areas exhibited a higher post-fire recovery than younger forests. Furthermore, the longer since crop abandonment translates into a faster post-fire recovery. Results highlight that to anticipate the impacts of disturbances on ecosystems, historical land trajectories should be taken into account. Collaborative work was facilitated by the Consolider-Ingenio Montes CSD2008-00040 project by Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation. Postdoctoral and predoctoral fellowships to CPP (EX2009-0703) and BSH (FPU) were provides by Spanish Ministry of Education.
-Global change
-Mediterranean forest
-Quercus
-Pinus
-Passive restoration
cc-by-nc-nd (c) Elsevier, 2012
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Article
Article - Accepted version
Elsevier
         

Full text files in this document

Files Size Format View
028864.pdf 720.1 KB application/pdf View/Open

Show full item record

Related documents

Other documents of the same author

 

Coordination

 

Supporters