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Seed bank response to prescribed fire in the central Appalachians.

Informally Refereed
Authors: Thomas M. Schuler, Melissa Thomas Van-Gundy, Mary B. Adams, W. Mark Ford
Year: 2010
Type: Research Paper
Station: Northern Research Station
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2737/NRS-RP-9
Source: Res. Pap. NRS-9. Newtown Square, PA: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northern Research Station. 9 p.

Abstract

Pre- and post-treatment seed-bank characteristics of woody species were compared after two prescribed fires in a mesic mixed-oak forest in the central Appalachians. Nineteen woody species were identified from soil samples. Mean species richness declined but evenness did not after prescribed burning. The seed bank was dominated by black birch, yellow-poplar, blackberry, grapevine and Hercules club before burning. Following burning, the median density of seed bank propagules declined by 45 percent. Black birch, yellow-poplar, and grapevine declined by 69, 56, and 40 percent, respectively. The results illustrate the importance of the seed bank as a robust source of non-oak regeneration in mixed-oak forests and of the potential effect of fire in altering it.

Keywords

mixed-mesophytic, West Virginia, oak regeneration, forest restoration

Citation

Schuler, Thomas M.; Thomas Van-Gundy, Melissa; Adams, Mary B.; Ford, W. Mark. 2010. Seed bank response to prescribed fire in the central Appalachians.
Citations
https://www.fs.usda.gov/research/treesearch/34694