Trees, grass, and fire in humid savannas-The importance of life history traits and spatial processes
Authored by Francesco Accatino, Kerstin Wiegand, David Ward, Michele Carlo De
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2015.09.014
Sponsors:
German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
ODD
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
We develop a model to investigate how trees can invade the grass stratum
in humid savannas despite repeated fires. In the literature, it is clear
that fire reduces tree canopy in savannas. However, fire alone may not
be sufficient to prevent tree invasion because there are ecological
mechanisms that hamper fire spread by undermining the continuity and
density of the grass stratum, which is the means of fire propagation in
savannas. Our model is spatially explicit and individual-based, and
includes two important factors characterizing the interactions between
fire, trees, and grass in savannas, viz, space and the strategies that
trees use to cope with fire. The strategies that trees employ against
fire emerge from life history traits. According to these strategies, we
classify savanna trees into three categories: resprouters, which are
able to resprout after their aboveground biomass is burned; resisters, which are able to resist fire due to a thick bark even in the juvenile
stages; avoiders, which are very fire-vulnerable in the juvenile stages, but are able to grow fast in the absence of fire. Our results show that
trees can invade the grass stratum and finally suppress fire spread
because one of the following occurs: (1) trees may resprout and form a
population that persists despite repeated effective fires; (2) trees may
be fire-resistant; (3) if trees are fire-vulnerable they may cluster and
grow in density until fire is prevented. Our results show that fire can
be effective in preventing the initiation of the invasion process in the
grass stratum. However, once the invasion process has begun, fire alone
is not able to reverse this process because of the strategies employed
by trees. Furthermore, when a high tree density is reached, grass
density is insufficient to allow effective fire spread. From a
management point of view, our results imply that fire must be coupled
with other factors (browsing, mechanical thinning) to reduce tree
density in encroached areas. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Competition
Coexistence
Simulation-model
National-park
South-africa
Vegetation
Persistence
Patch-dynamics
Ivory-coast
Semiarid savannas