Abstract
Context
Annual grass invasions often increase the frequency and extent of wildfire. Climate variability and fire history may have modifying effects on invasion success and its link to changing fire regimes.
Objective
Characterize the role of climate variability and fire history in vegetation shifts of an invaded desert landscape.
Method
Pre- and post-fire landscape vegetation greenness were assessed on multiple, independent wildfires in Mojave Desert shrublands using a 34 year record of normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) derived from 1685 Landsat images and matched with a record of precipitation using linear regression.
Results
Annual maximum NDVI, and its annual variance of monthly maximum values, were significantly higher on post-fire than pre-fire landscapes. Additionally, post-fire landscapes showed greater sensitivity to antecedent precipitation received the previous 4 months than pre-fire and unburned landscapes. Ground surveys of vegetation indicate that post-fire landscapes show little indication of recovery of native shrub cover and density but instead are dominated by the exotic grass red brome (Bromus rubens L.). Increased NDVI sensitivity to precipitation is likely related to the growth of red brome, which dominates burned landscapes. Record precipitation in the fall of 2004 contributed to the record NDVI values in 2005 likely driven by high density of red brome.
Conclusions
The heightened response of post-fire vegetation to extreme and more variable precipitation events appears to be contributing to the emergence of an invasive grass-fire cycle that constrains the re-establishment of fire sensitive native shrubs while reinforcing the dominance of exotic grasses.
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Acknowledgements
We gratefully acknowledge Drs. Steven Petersen and Ryan Jensen for reviewing this manuscript along with the significant contributions of anonymous reviewers. We express appreciation for the use of Brigham Young University’s Lytle Ranch Preserve, which provided accommodations while working at field sites. This research was funded by the Sant Educational Endowment for a Sustainable Environment, the Redd Center, the United States Department of Agriculture NIFA award number 2010-04092, and the United States Department of Interior BLM.
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Horn, K.J., St. Clair, S.B. Wildfire and exotic grass invasion alter plant productivity in response to climate variability in the Mojave Desert. Landscape Ecol 32, 635–646 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10980-016-0466-7
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10980-016-0466-7