One way species of low maximum height can accrue sufficient light income to persist in vegetation is via rapid height growth immediately following disturbance. By surveying patches of known time since fire, we reconstructed height–growth trajectories for 19 post-fire recruiting species from fire-prone vegetation in south-eastern Australia. Cross-species patterns of height growth were compared to several plant traits thought to influence height strategy, including leaf mass per area, stem tissue density, stem diameter and capacity to resprout. Shorter species were found to temporarily outpace taller species, both as resprouters and within reseeders. Among reseeders, a single axis of variation summarised patterns of height–growth, time to ons...
In frequently burned ecosystems, many plants persist by repeated resprouting from basal or belowgrou...
This paper examines the effects of seedling size and age on fire tolerance of Allosyncarpia ternata ...
Canopy tree populations in mesic savannas are often bimodal with few saplings but many smaller indiv...
© 2017 Ecological Society of Australia Plant height and growth are fundamental to the understanding ...
Increased fire frequency can result in a decline of obligate seeding plants, which rely on re-seedin...
© 2017 The Authors. Functional Ecology © 2017 British Ecological Society The rate of elongation and ...
1 Potential height, which spans at least an order of magnitude across species, is considered an impo...
Background and Aims: Height gain plays an important role in plant life-history strategies and specie...
Anthropogenic modifications to climate and natural fire regimes are occurring globally, leading to t...
Plant populations persist under recurrent fire via resprouting from surviving tissues (resprouters) ...
Postfire resprouting (R+) and recruitment from seed (S+) are common resilience traits in Australian ...
In fire-prone ecosystems, plant species exhibit a range of traits which allow them to persist under ...
The resprouting response of plant species to fire is a key life history trait that has profound effe...
<div><p>In frequently burned ecosystems, many plants persist by repeated resprouting from basal or b...
Postfire resprouting and recruitment from seed are key plant life-history traits that influence popu...
In frequently burned ecosystems, many plants persist by repeated resprouting from basal or belowgrou...
This paper examines the effects of seedling size and age on fire tolerance of Allosyncarpia ternata ...
Canopy tree populations in mesic savannas are often bimodal with few saplings but many smaller indiv...
© 2017 Ecological Society of Australia Plant height and growth are fundamental to the understanding ...
Increased fire frequency can result in a decline of obligate seeding plants, which rely on re-seedin...
© 2017 The Authors. Functional Ecology © 2017 British Ecological Society The rate of elongation and ...
1 Potential height, which spans at least an order of magnitude across species, is considered an impo...
Background and Aims: Height gain plays an important role in plant life-history strategies and specie...
Anthropogenic modifications to climate and natural fire regimes are occurring globally, leading to t...
Plant populations persist under recurrent fire via resprouting from surviving tissues (resprouters) ...
Postfire resprouting (R+) and recruitment from seed (S+) are common resilience traits in Australian ...
In fire-prone ecosystems, plant species exhibit a range of traits which allow them to persist under ...
The resprouting response of plant species to fire is a key life history trait that has profound effe...
<div><p>In frequently burned ecosystems, many plants persist by repeated resprouting from basal or b...
Postfire resprouting and recruitment from seed are key plant life-history traits that influence popu...
In frequently burned ecosystems, many plants persist by repeated resprouting from basal or belowgrou...
This paper examines the effects of seedling size and age on fire tolerance of Allosyncarpia ternata ...
Canopy tree populations in mesic savannas are often bimodal with few saplings but many smaller indiv...