A climatic dipole drives short- and long-term patterns of postfire forest recovery in the western United States.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

Department of Ecosystem and Conservation Sciences, College of Forestry and Conservation, University of Montana, Missoula, MT 59812.

Published: November 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Researchers are studying how climate change and increasing fires affect forest recovery, specifically focusing on the challenges posed by reduced seed availability and postfire drought on conifer growth.
  • - The study reveals a north-south climatic dipole that influences postfire recovery in the US Interior West, where varying moisture conditions can affect tree establishment differently in regions like the northern Rocky Mountains and the southwestern US.
  • - Findings show that while climate conditions may favor recovery in one region, drought in another can hinder it, highlighting the complex relationship between climatic variability and forest recovery over time and its implications under global change.

Article Abstract

Researchers are increasingly examining patterns and drivers of postfire forest recovery amid growing concern that climate change and intensifying fires will trigger ecosystem transformations. Diminished seed availability and postfire drought have emerged as key constraints on conifer recruitment. However, the spatial and temporal extent to which recurring modes of climatic variability shape patterns of postfire recovery remain largely unexplored. Here, we identify a north-south dipole in annual climatic moisture deficit anomalies across the Interior West of the US and characterize its influence on forest recovery from fire. We use annually resolved establishment models from dendrochronological records to correlate this climatic dipole with short-term postfire juvenile recruitment. We also examine longer-term recovery trajectories using Forest Inventory and Analysis data from 989 burned plots. We show that annual postfire ponderosa pine recruitment probabilities in the northern Rocky Mountains (NR) and the southwestern US (SW) track the strength of the dipole, while declining overall due to increasing aridity. This indicates that divergent recovery trajectories may be triggered concurrently across large spatial scales: favorable conditions in the SW can correspond to drought in the NR that inhibits ponderosa pine establishment, and vice versa. The imprint of this climatic dipole is manifest for years postfire, as evidenced by dampened long-term likelihoods of juvenile ponderosa pine presence in areas that experienced postfire drought. These findings underscore the importance of climatic variability at multiple spatiotemporal scales in driving cross-regional patterns of forest recovery and have implications for understanding ecosystem transformations and species range dynamics under global change.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7703638PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2007434117DOI Listing

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