1971
DOI: 10.2307/1942434
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Succession after Fire in the Chaparral of Southern California

Abstract: Extensive sampling of chaparral with 10-m line intercepts in the San Gabriel and San Bernardino Mountains of southern California revealed site-oriented vegetative characteristics and successional patterns. Of the 78 species encountered, few were widespread and abundant; most were local and infrequent. The most widespread and abundant species were long-lived rootcrown sprouters. Adenostoma fasciculatum ( chamise), the most frequently encountered shrub, occurred on 71.4% of the sites and composed one-fifth of al… Show more

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Cited by 437 publications
(307 citation statements)
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“…In the early post-fue years, herbaceous floradominated Aleppo pine forests, as is true for other Mediterranean climate ecosystems (Hanes 1971, Naveh 1973, Trabaud 1980, Arianoutsou-Faraggitaki and Margaris 1981a. Arianontson-Faraggitaki 1984, De Lillis and Testi 1992, Keeley 1992, Faraco et al 1993.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…In the early post-fue years, herbaceous floradominated Aleppo pine forests, as is true for other Mediterranean climate ecosystems (Hanes 1971, Naveh 1973, Trabaud 1980, Arianoutsou-Faraggitaki and Margaris 1981a. Arianontson-Faraggitaki 1984, De Lillis and Testi 1992, Keeley 1992, Faraco et al 1993.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…This has been noted by Willson (1992). In both cases, burning and cutting, the woody species that appear during the first few years are the typical resprouters of the zone, thus allowing this succession system to be compared to that described by Hanes (1971) as autosuccession. Immediately after perturbations such as burning and cutting, resprouter species, like Erica australis, mobilise stored carbohydrates and possibly also metabolised water in the roots.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…After cutting and burning, there is a succession, defined by Hanes (1971) as autosuccession. After ploughing, there is a secondary succession in the classical sense, with a first stage of dominance by herbaceous species until the third year and a second stage of dominance by woody species from the fourth year.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Plant succession after fire in Mediterranean communities consists largely of the regeneration and development through the respective life cycle of the species present before fire (Specht et al 1958;Hanes 1971;Arianoutsou 1979;Kazanis and Arianoutsou 1996). It is a process of secondary autosuccession in which the burned stand, although initially appearing to be different from the pre-burned one, retains its floristic identity in time.…”
Section: Post-fire Successionmentioning
confidence: 99%