Ecological memory, often determined by the extent and type of retained biological legacies present following disturbance, may produce persistent landscape patterns. However, after fire, the persistence or switch to an alternative state may depend on the complex interplay of ecological memory (biological legacies) and potential effects of new external factors influencing the post-fire environment. The current study assesses both the strength of ecological memory resulting from biological legacies of pre-burn vegetation types as well as post-fire effects of livestock. Following a severe fire in 1999, we set up a network of long-term exclosures to examine the effects of legacies and cumulative herbivory by cattle on fuel types, amounts, distri...
In fire-prone landscapes, differences in post-fire regeneration by resprouting between species or si...
We estimate post-fire population trajectories, and to analyze the effect of fire recurrence on the p...
Disturbances like biological invasions and fire may affect in unexpected ways plant-animal interacti...
Aims: Structural and compositional changes along post-fire succession modify plant community pronene...
Question Could disturbance by fire and ungulate herbivory alter fire regimes by increasing flammabi...
Questions: Increased wildfire activity is resulting in plant community-type conversions worldwide. I...
Fire severity influences the recovery and biodiversity of plant communities. We compared the early p...
Question: In northwest Patagonia burning of fire-resistant forests creates a community-level positiv...
One strategy of plant survival during post-fire succession is to persist and regenerate by recruitin...
In the context of global warming and increasing impacts of invasive plants and animals, we examine h...
Understanding the relationship between flammability and time since fire (TSF) is crucial for predict...
The ability of communities or ecosystems to recover their structure and function after a disturbance...
Fire severity and extent are expected to increase in many regions worldwide due to climate change. T...
Soil seed bank is an important source of resilience of plant communities who suffered disturbances. ...
Grasslands are ecosystems dominated by herbaceous and woody vegetation, whose structure is determine...
In fire-prone landscapes, differences in post-fire regeneration by resprouting between species or si...
We estimate post-fire population trajectories, and to analyze the effect of fire recurrence on the p...
Disturbances like biological invasions and fire may affect in unexpected ways plant-animal interacti...
Aims: Structural and compositional changes along post-fire succession modify plant community pronene...
Question Could disturbance by fire and ungulate herbivory alter fire regimes by increasing flammabi...
Questions: Increased wildfire activity is resulting in plant community-type conversions worldwide. I...
Fire severity influences the recovery and biodiversity of plant communities. We compared the early p...
Question: In northwest Patagonia burning of fire-resistant forests creates a community-level positiv...
One strategy of plant survival during post-fire succession is to persist and regenerate by recruitin...
In the context of global warming and increasing impacts of invasive plants and animals, we examine h...
Understanding the relationship between flammability and time since fire (TSF) is crucial for predict...
The ability of communities or ecosystems to recover their structure and function after a disturbance...
Fire severity and extent are expected to increase in many regions worldwide due to climate change. T...
Soil seed bank is an important source of resilience of plant communities who suffered disturbances. ...
Grasslands are ecosystems dominated by herbaceous and woody vegetation, whose structure is determine...
In fire-prone landscapes, differences in post-fire regeneration by resprouting between species or si...
We estimate post-fire population trajectories, and to analyze the effect of fire recurrence on the p...
Disturbances like biological invasions and fire may affect in unexpected ways plant-animal interacti...