News Release

As California wildfires burn, southern plant species are shifting northward

Forest thinning before wildfire increases diversity

Peer-Reviewed Publication

University of California - Davis

Post-Wildfire, Angora Fire Site

image: Researchers, including UC Davis postdoctoral student Jens Stevens, right, examine a site burned by 2007's Angora Fire. Their study found that as tree canopy is disturbed, southern plant species are moving in to replace the forest floor. view more 

Credit: Andrew Latimer/UC Davis

As California wildfires burn tree canopies and the forest floors they support, the plants that are replacing the understory are increasingly those found in more southern areas of the West, according to a study from the University of California, Davis.

"The plants we're finding underneath our forests are becoming more like those seen in Mexico and Southern California," said lead author Jens Stevens, a postdoctoral scholar with the UC Davis John Muir Institute of the Environment. "Under climate change, we're seeing species from drier, warmer areas increasingly taking over. It's a long process, but forest disturbance, be it thinning or wildfire, has the potential to hasten those shifts."

For example, a forest floor strewn with lupine and violets--typically found in places like Northern California and Canada--may be replaced with flowers and shrubs more often seen in drier southern climates, such as manzanita and monkey flower.

THINNED FORESTS MORE RESILIENT

However, pockets of cooler microclimates remain in forests that were thinned before a wildfire occurred. These forests burned less hot and therefore left some tree canopy, allowing for both northern and southern plant species to coexist.

"A balance of open, intermediate and closed canopy across the landscape is good," Stevens said. "If you can increase microclimates, you can increase diversity."

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The study, published in the Journal of Ecology, examined 12 different mixed-conifer sites in California stretching from Modoc to San Bernardino counties and encompassing several sites in the Sierra, including forests burned by the Angora Fire in 2007 and the American River Complex fires that burned northeast of Sacramento in 2008.

Study co-authors include Andrew Latimer of the UC Davis Department of Plant Sciences, Susan Harrison of the UC Davis Department of Environmental Science and Policy, and Hugh Safford of the USDA Forest Service Pacific Southwest Region.

The study was funded by the USDA Forest Service Pacific Southwest Region, California Energy Commission and the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture.


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