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1 April 2011 Canyon Grassland Vegetation Changes Following Fire in Northern Idaho
Corey L. Gucker, Stephen C. Bunting
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Abstract

Native and normative vegetation mosaics are common in western rangelands. If land managers could better predict changes in the abundance of native and nonnative species following disturbances, maintenance of native plant cover and diversity may be improved. In August 2000, during suppression of a wildfire near Lewiston, Idaho, a backing fire burned canyon grassland plots. A previous study had recorded species composition and cover prior to the fire, so we were able to evaluate changes in species composition and abundance on established plots before and after the fire. Overall, summer burning had little effect on the grassland communities. Pseudoroegneria spicata recovered to prefire coverage by the third postfire year. In the third postfire year, cover of native and nonnative annual species was significantly greater on burned than unburned sites (P < 0.03). Bromus tectorum cover increased, as expected, on burned plots. Prefire and postfire cover values for Centaurea solstitialis were nearly equal, and there were no significant cover differences between burned and unburned plots in any year. As part of this study, we also evaluated changes in the cover of dominant native and nonnative species with respect to their prefire seral stage on burned and unburned plots. Because our sample sizes were small, we only report community-level trends but suggest that this type of community analysis could make for an interesting future study.

Corey L. Gucker and Stephen C. Bunting "Canyon Grassland Vegetation Changes Following Fire in Northern Idaho," Western North American Naturalist 71(1), 97-105, (1 April 2011). https://doi.org/10.3398/064.071.0113
Received: 4 December 2009; Accepted: 1 November 2010; Published: 1 April 2011
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