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Distinct roles of savanna and forest tree species in regeneration under fire suppression in a Brazilian savanna
Authors:Erika L. Geiger  Sybil G. Gotsch  Gabriel Damasco  M. Haridasan  Augusto C. Franco  William A. Hoffmann
Affiliation:1. Department of Plant Biology, Campus Box 7612, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina 27695‐7612, USA;2. Department of Natural Resources and the Environment, University of New Hampshire, James Hall 114, 56 College Road, Durham, NH 03824, USA;3. Laboratório de Manejo Florestal, Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amaz?nia (INPA) Av. Efigênio Sales, 2239, CEP 69011‐970, Manaus, Amazonas, Brasil;4. Departamento de Ecologia, Caixa Postal 04457, Universidade de Brasília, Brasília, DF 70904‐970, Brazil;5. Departamento de Botanica, Caixa Postal 04457, Universidade de Brasília, Brasília, DF 70904‐970, Brazil
Abstract:Questions: Has fire suppression relaxed barriers to the exchange of species between savanna and forest? Do all species or a subset of species participate in this exchange? Would current vegetation structure persist if fire suppression were to cease? Location: A gallery forest edge in the Cerrado region of central Brazil that burned only once in the past 35 years. Methods: Density of tree seedlings, saplings and adults, leaf area index (LAI), tree basal area and diameter were surveyed in 12, 10 m × 70 m transects centred on and perpendicular to the forest–savanna boundary. Community composition was assessed using non‐metric multi‐dimensional scaling (NMDS). Results: Basal area and LAI declined substantially from forest to savanna, with an associated shift in species composition. Savanna tree species were nearly absent in the forest, but accounted for the majority of stems in the savanna. In contrast, forest species comprised 14% of adults and more than one‐third of juveniles in the savanna. Despite the high diversity of trees (85 species) in the forest, five species play a particularly large role in this initial phase of forest expansion. Reintroduction of fire, however, would result in widespread topkill of juveniles and the majority of adult forest trees, thereby interrupting the succession towards forest. Conclusions: After 35 years during which the site burned only once, the savanna still remains dominated by savanna species. Nevertheless, the dominance of forest juveniles in border and savanna tree communities suggests that with a continued policy of fire suppression, the forest will continue to expand.
Keywords:Cerrado  fire  forest expansion  forest–  savanna boundary  tropical savanna
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