Ecology, Fire

Plant Sciences

Ecology, Fire

Fire has been an agent of change in nearly every terrestrial vegetation type on Earth, shaping both the species composition and structure. The probability of occurrence and the effects of fire vary widely depending upon the amount of fuel present, topography, climate, sources of ignition, and present species composition of the area. Fires may be severe, causing great mortality of existing plants and significantly changing the species composition of the burned area, or they may have little impact on the composition and consume only the dry dead plant material present. They may burn intensely as fast-moving fires with flame lengths greater than 25 meters, or they may occur as slow-moving fires with flame lengths less than 0.5 meter. These sources of variation influence the effects that fire has on the vegetation and the ecological role of fire.

Prior to human intervention, fires occurred very frequently in some vegetation types. Fire history studies in temperate grasslands in Africa and North America, some ponderosa pine forests of western North America, and longleaf pine forests of southeastern North America indicate that fires occurred at an average of less than every ten years. When fires occur frequently, the vegetation's composition becomes dominated by fire-adapted (tolerant) species. Consequently, when fires occur, there is only minor change in species composition and the vegetation quickly recovers to the preburn condition, often within five years or less. The more frequently fire occurs on an area, the more it becomes dominated by fire-adapted species.

In other vegetation types, the fires may occur many decades or even centuries apart. Fires were naturally very infrequent in many arid areas where the fuels are not sufficient to carry a fire, or in humid areas where the fuels are seldom adequately dry to burn. Very often the effects of fire in these areas is long lasting and the vegetation may not recover for many centuries. When fires occur infrequently, fire-intolerant species become established, and the effects of fire are much more lasting. Even in these communities, however, fire may play important ecological roles in the functioning of the ecosystem .

Ecologists are becoming increasingly aware of the importance of fire in the maintenance and functioning of ecosystems. Rather than focusing on a single fire event, it is useful to apply the concept of a fire regime when considering the effects of fire on large areas over a long time. A fire regime describes the typical fire characteristics when applied to a landscape over many burning cycles. Fire regimes include characteristics such as frequency (how often the fire occurs over time), size, intensity (the rate at which fire consumes fuel and releases heat), severity (the effects of fire on the biota and soil), continuity (the degree to which unburned areas remain within the fire's perimeter), pattern (where fire typically occurs on the landscape), and variability in the previous characteristics. Modern humans have changed the fire regimes for many areas of the world. When fire regimes change, ecosystems and fire effects change in ways that are often not desirable. For instance, when fires are less frequent, they burn more intensely.

Creation and Maintenance of Vegetation Composition and Diversity

Fire and other disturbances typically kill some plants and alter the competitive relationships between species. The initial postburn community is composed of those species that survive the fire and those that can efficiently migrate to the site. Community succession gradually modifies the postburn environment of the site and the composition changes in response to the changing environment. Species and, in some cases, the community may be replaced by later successional species and communities. Thus, fire plays a critical role in maintaining or creating new habitat for those species that are adapted to fire occurrence. For example, in many areas ponderosa pine-bunchgrass vegetation will gradually change to a forest dominated by other tree species, such as Douglas-fir, in the absence of fire. Periodic fires maintain the ponderosa pine-bunchgrass vegetation. A similar situation exists for many temperate grasslands, where in the absence of fire, grasslands are replaced through succession by forest or woodland vegetation.

In some instances, the vegetation itself must be removed by fire in order for the environment necessary for that vegetation to be maintained. For example, big sagebrush grassland often occurs in a fire-maintained mosaic with juniper woodland vegetation in western North America. In the absence of fire, the juniper woodland vegetation will replace the sagebrush grassland through community succession. Young juniper that are establishing within the sagebrush grassland can be readily killed by fire. Sagebrush will also be removed by the fire and a community composed of grasses and other herbaceous plants will become established initially. Sagebrush seedlings that cannot become established within a dense juniper woodland, however, will establish within the grassland and thus, over time, fire maintains the sagebrush grassland vegetation in the landscape.

Cycling of Organic Matter and Nutrients

In many areas of the world, the rates of plant biomass production exceed the rates of biomass decomposition. In these cold or dry areas, bio-mass tends to gradually increase over time as succession and plant growth occur. Accumulation of biomass, particularly dead biomass, has many effects on the ecosystem. The nutrients essential to plant growth become increasingly concentrated in plant tissue and unavailable for subsequent plant growth. This may result in deficiencies of some essential nutrients and the reduction in biomass production. Fire rapidly cycles these nutrients and makes them available for future plant growth. In this way fire may help maintain the productivity of the ecosystem. The combustion process, however, results in the volatilization of some elements such as nitrogen and carbon, and these are lost to the atmosphere. Nitrogen is replaced in the ecosystem through nitrogen fixation and other processes of the nitrogen cycle.

Aboriginal Humans and Fire

In addition to its use for heating, lighting, and cooking, fire was the first tool that primitive peoples had to manipulate the environment on a broad scale to better meet their purposes. Fire has been used by hunter-gatherer societies to promote the production of certain wild crops (such as seeds: wild rice, sunflower, balsamroot, and mesquite beans; tubers: camas and bracken; berries: blueberry and blackberry; and nuts: acorns and chestnuts), increase the nutritional quality of forage for wild animals, create desirable habitat for game species, decrease the natural migration rates of game species allowing for increased hunting possibilities, control problem tick and insect populations, open travel corridors, and reduce fire hazard and enemy hiding cover in the vicinity of campsites.

Aboriginal people have also used fire for driving game species into traps or to hunters, long-distance signaling, warfare, and ceremonial purposes. Some peoples had the tradition of setting large fires in hopes that it would induce rain. Pastoralists used fire to clear pastures of trees and shrubs, increase forage production, improve forage nutritional quality, and decrease parasites affecting their livestock. Early agricultural cultures used fire to clear natural vegetation to facilitate cultivation , remove organic crop residue, and fertilize fields by cycling nutrients. In addition, many fires were likely set by accident from cooking fires. Thus, human culture has had a long association and evolution with fire.

Use of Fire as a Land Management Tool

The intentional use of fire to achieve a land management objective is often referred to as prescribed burning. The fire is prescribed in the sense that the specific area, burning conditions, and expected results are identified prior to ignition. In addition, specific land management objectives are developed that justify the use of fire. Weather conditions (such as wind, temperature, relative humidity, and fuel moisture) and ignition patterns are selected that allow the land manager to control fire spread and achieve desirable effects on the vegetation. The management objectives of today's prescribed burning remain very similar to many of the aboriginal people's uses. The most common objectives include: creating or maintaining habitat for wild and domestic plants and animals, controlling undesirable plants, increasing the nutritional quality of forage for wild and domestic herbivores , reducing fire hazard through fuel reduction, and increasing nutrient cycling rates. Fire continues to be extensively used as a land treatment by hunter-gatherer, pastoral, and agricultural peoples around the world to clear vegetation, improve pastures, and remove crop residue.

Natural fire programs are employed in some national parks and wilderness areas to maintain the ecosystem in nonhuman-affected conditions as much as possible. Natural fires are those that have a nonhuman ignition source, primarily lightning. Prior to initiating a natural fire program, land managers develop a plan that identifies the conditions under which lightning-ignited fires will be allowed to burn without direct fire suppression control measures being taken. Since the weather conditions or location of any specific fire cannot be precisely predicted, however, the expected results of fire are usually described in more general terms than for human-ignited fire. The objectives of these fires usually includes having fire play a natural role in the ecological processes of the ecosystem.

see also Chaparral; Coniferous Forests; Ecology; Grasslands.

Stephen C. Bunting

Bibliography

Agee, James K. Fire Ecology of Pacific Northwest Forests. Covello, CA: Island Press, 1993.

Biswell, Harold H. Prescribed Burning in California Wildlands Vegetation Management. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1989.

Boyd, Robert, ed. Indians, Fire and the Land in the Pacific Northwest. Corvallis, OR: Oregon State University Press, 1999.

Bunting, Stephen C. "The Use and Role of Fire in Natural Areas." In National Parks and Protected Areas: Their Role in Environmental Protection, ed. R. Gerald Wright. Cambridge, UK: Blackwell Science, 1996.

Pyne, Stephen J. Fire in America: A Cultural History of Wildland and Rural Fire. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1988.

. World Fire: The Culture of Fire on Earth. Seattle, WA: University of Washington Press, 1995.

, Patricia L. Andrews, and Richard D. Laven. Introduction to Wildland Fire, 2nd ed. New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1996.


Find more facts and information related to the .
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research

(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)

Forest fire: friend or foe? Experts say fires have their place in nature.
; ...reintroducing fire to some fire-dependent ecosystems. In these forests, fire plays a role in determining...do not realize is that fire is a natural step in producing...and extent of fires. When fire is excluded from the natural...forest's plant density and species composition ... Read more
Forest fire: Friend or foe?
; ...reintroducing fire to some fire-dependent ecosystems. In these forests, fire plays a role in determining...do not realize is that fire is a natural step in producing...and extent of fires. When fire is excluded from the natural...forest's plant density and species composition ... Read more
FIRE AS A MANAGEMENT TOOL:ROBERT W. MUTCH
; ...suppression and prescribed fire, Or pay a dear price later...wildfires. 4. Silvicultural and fire prescriptions must be integrated...restore stand densities and species composition that are sustainable into...flammable today as a result of fire exclusion that prescribed...lakes and bogs; ... Read more
Fire effects on community structure, composition, and diversity in a dry sandstone barrens
; ...Champaign, IL 61820). Fire effects on community...130:170-192. 2003.-Fire effects on canopy...and ground-cover species composition, structure, and diversity...was monitored at a fire treatment site and a nearby fire-free control site...treatment site, tree species richness was ... Read more
Soul Fire.(Philosophical view)(Brief Article)
; Fire is a preeminent way for humans to kindle compassion, extract...celebration or witchy ignitions of effigies and real flesh. Fire is our closest analog to spirit, its spectacular metaphor...enlightenment. We have even subdivided our bodies into a fire regime. Belly fire stokes good digestion and ... Read more
Fire storms. (weather created by large fires)
; Fire fighters hate winds. They can make a fire fall to a puff or explode to a roar; they can make ti jink...Nature's winds are fickle and unpredictable, and they can be a fire fighter's worst enemy. What's more, when conditions are right... Read more
Tahoe fire whimpers way to finish
; Fire officials all but claimed victory over the Angora Fire late Thursday after two days of kind weather that defied...first half-day. Authorities said they now know the cause of a fire that started about 2 p.m. Sunday at a rock outcropping near... Read more
Tahoe fire whimpers without winds
; Fire officials all but claimed victory over the Angora Fire late Thursday after two days of kind weather that defied...first half-day. Authorities said they now know the cause of a fire that started about 2 p.m. Sunday at a rock outcropping near... Read more
Strategies for managing fire risks
; fire safety Using alarm, sprinkler and building material technologies...disaster It's easy to get lost in the regulatory minutiae of fire safety. There is a host of requirements from federal agencies, insurers, user groups, and state and local building and fire agencies. But good fire protection ... Read more
A little fire smarts saves many lives
; A little fire smarts saves many lives October 5 to 11 is Fire Prevention Week. This year's theme is "Know When To Go: React Fast To Fire." Each year, hundreds of people are injured or killed because they didn't know what to do when a fire broke out... Read more

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

Fire Ecology
Fire Ecology Fire is one of the leading natural forces that...land-based ecosystems for several thousand years. Fire is especially important in regulating the species composition of vegetation. Fire is particularly important in forests of... Read more
Field Studies in Plant Ecology
Field Studies in Plant Ecology Some of the most important ecological research taking place today is in field studies in plant ecology. These are studies undertaken to answer such important questions...investigator manipulates only a single or a few variables, such as fire frequency. The advantage of field ... Read more
St Anthony's fire
St Anthony's fire See ergot . Read more
fire climax
fire climax(pyroclimax) A climax community for which fire is the dominating control factor, as in the long-leaf pine forests of the USA. Fire is also thought to be an important determining factor, interacting in complex ways... Read more
fox-fire
fox-fire A light (bioluminescence) emitted by moist decaying wood or by certain types of fungal fruit body . Read more

For Students and teachers!

HighBeam Encyclopedia provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including:

HighBeam Encyclopedia provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including: