Post-fire recovery of revegetated woodland communities in south-eastern Australia

Pickup M, Wilson S, Freudenberger D, Nicholls N, Gould L, Hnatiuk S, Delandre J. 2013. Post-fire recovery of revegetated woodland communities in south-eastern Australia. Austral Ecology. 38(3), 300–312.

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Journal Article | Published | English

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Author
Pickup, MelindaISTA ; Wilson, Susie; Freudenberger, David; Nicholls, Nick; Gould, Lori; Hnatiuk, Sarah; Delandre, Jeni
Department
Abstract
The primary goal of restoration is to create self-sustaining ecological communities that are resilient to periodic disturbance. Currently, little is known about how restored communities respond to disturbance events such as fire and how this response compares to remnant vegetation. Following the 2003 fires in south-eastern Australia we examined the post-fire response of revegetation plantings and compared this to remnant vegetation. Ten burnt and 10 unburnt (control) sites were assessed for each of three types of vegetation (direct seeding revegetation, revegetation using nursery seedlings (tubestock) and remnant woodland). Sixty sampling sites were surveyed 6months after fire to quantify the initial survival of mid- and overstorey plant species in each type of vegetation. Three and 5years after fire all sites were resurveyed to assess vegetation structure, species diversity and vigour, as well as indicators of soil function. Overall, revegetation showed high (>60%) post-fire survival, but this varied among species depending on regeneration strategy (obligate seeder or resprouter). The native ground cover, mid- and overstorey in both types of plantings showed rapid recovery of vegetation structure and cover within 3years of fire. This recovery was similar to the burnt remnant woodlands. Non-native (exotic) ground cover initially increased after fire, but was no different in burnt and unburnt sites 5years after fire. Fire had no effect on species richness, but burnt direct seeding sites had reduced species diversity (Simpson's Diversity Index) while diversity was higher in burnt remnant woodlands. Indices of soil function in all types of vegetation had recovered to levels found in unburnt sites 5years after fire. These results indicate that even young revegetation (stands <10years old) showed substantial recovery from disturbance by fire. This suggests that revegetation can provide an important basis for restoring woodland communities in the fire-prone Australian environment.
Publishing Year
Date Published
2013-05-01
Journal Title
Austral Ecology
Volume
38
Issue
3
Page
300 - 312
IST-REx-ID

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Pickup M, Wilson S, Freudenberger D, et al. Post-fire recovery of revegetated woodland communities in south-eastern Australia. Austral Ecology. 2013;38(3):300-312. doi:10.1111/j.1442-9993.2012.02404.x
Pickup, M., Wilson, S., Freudenberger, D., Nicholls, N., Gould, L., Hnatiuk, S., & Delandre, J. (2013). Post-fire recovery of revegetated woodland communities in south-eastern Australia. Austral Ecology. Wiley-Blackwell. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1442-9993.2012.02404.x
Pickup, Melinda, Susie Wilson, David Freudenberger, Nick Nicholls, Lori Gould, Sarah Hnatiuk, and Jeni Delandre. “Post-Fire Recovery of Revegetated Woodland Communities in South-Eastern Australia.” Austral Ecology. Wiley-Blackwell, 2013. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1442-9993.2012.02404.x.
M. Pickup et al., “Post-fire recovery of revegetated woodland communities in south-eastern Australia,” Austral Ecology, vol. 38, no. 3. Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 300–312, 2013.
Pickup M, Wilson S, Freudenberger D, Nicholls N, Gould L, Hnatiuk S, Delandre J. 2013. Post-fire recovery of revegetated woodland communities in south-eastern Australia. Austral Ecology. 38(3), 300–312.
Pickup, Melinda, et al. “Post-Fire Recovery of Revegetated Woodland Communities in South-Eastern Australia.” Austral Ecology, vol. 38, no. 3, Wiley-Blackwell, 2013, pp. 300–12, doi:10.1111/j.1442-9993.2012.02404.x.

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