Spatial and temporal effects of burning on plant community characteristics and composition in a fescue prairie

View/ Open
Date
2005-04-22Author
Gross, Dale
Type
ThesisDegree Level
MastersMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Conserving structural and compositional diversity in Fescue Prairie requires reintroducing natural disturbances according to their historic regime. Fire is an important natural process that may be a source of spatial heterogeneity in Fescue Prairies. The effects of burning in all months of the year except January and February were evaluated in a Fescue Prairie in central Saskatchewan for 6 years following burning on 2 sites that had not been previously burned and 2 sites that had been burned 5 years earlier. Except for burning in March, burning reduced cover of litter (P
Degree
Master of Science (M.Sc.)Department
Plant SciencesProgram
Plant SciencesSupervisor
Romo, James T.Committee
Pennock, Dan J.; Hughes, Geoffrey R.; Bai, Yuguang; Archibold, O. W. (Bill)Copyright Date
April 2005Subject
disturbance regime
Elymus lanceolatus
Festuca hallii
fire return interval
grassland
heterogeneity
Hesperostipa curtiseta
restoration
natural variability
canonical correspondence analysis
spatial variance
time of burning
time since burning