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Fire tolerance of a resprouting Artemisia (Asteraceae) shrub
Authors:Stephen L. Winter,Samuel D. Fuhlendorf,Carla L. Goad,Craig A. Davis,Karen R. Hickman,David M. Leslie  Suffix"  >Jr.
Affiliation:(1) Department of Natural Resource Ecology and Management, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK, USA;(2) Department of Statistics, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK, USA;(3) US Geological Survey, Oklahoma Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK, USA
Abstract:In North America, most Artemisia (Asteraceae) shrub species lack the ability to resprout after disturbances that remove aboveground biomass. We studied the response of one of the few resprouting Artemisia shrubs, Artemisia filifolia (sand sagebrush), to the effects of prescribed fires. We collected data on A. filifolia density and structural characteristics (height, canopy area, and canopy volume) in an A. filifolia shrubland in the southern Great Plains of North America. Our study sites included areas that had not been treated with prescribed fire, areas that had been treated with only one prescribed fire within the previous 5 years, and areas that had been treated with two prescribed fires within the previous 10 years. Our data were collected at time periods ranging from ½ to 5 years after the prescribed fires. Density of A. filifolia was not affected by one or two fires. Structural characteristics, although initially altered by prescribed fire, recovered to levels characteristic of unburned areas in 3–4 years after those fires. In contrast to most non-sprouting North American Artemisia shrub species, our research suggested that the resprouting A. filifolia is highly tolerant to the effects of fire.
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