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Historical fire ecology and its effect on vegetation dynamics of the Lagunas de Montebello National Park, Chiapas, México
- Source :
- iForest-Biogeosciences and Forestry, iForest-Biogeosciences and Forestry, Vol 14, Iss 1, Pp 548-559 (2021)
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- Italian Society of Sivilculture and Forest Ecology (SISEF), 2021.
-
Abstract
- Historical information on wildfires and dendrochronological studies offer meaningful clues about fire and climate regimes, factors that affect forest structure and dynamics. This study aimed to determine the effect of fire history on vegetation dynamics and successional pathways of areas under different fire management policies in the Lagunas de Montebello National Park (LMNP), Chiapas, Mexico. The selected study sites were El Parque area under fire exclusion policies since 1961; Tziscao-inhabited area under fire prohibition since 1984; and Antela area with a traditional agricultural fire management history. A Pinus oocarpa ring-width chronology was used as a proxy for climate variability to which wildfire occurrence was mapped and to determine the establishment patterns of this dominant species. Current vegetation composition and structure and fuel loads were determined to characterise the study sites. Large wildfires, like those occurring in 1984 and 1998, were associated with periods of high humidity followed by intense droughts; they were linked to strong El Nino events and severely impacted the LMNP. Vegetation dynamics indicated simplification of mesophyll forest (climax) to pine-oak-sweetgum forests, with Pinus dominating the overstorey in all sampling sites. Pine, oak and sweetgum species were the dominant juvenile trees in Antela, El Parque and Tziscao, respectively. Late-successional seedlings (i.e., Prunus) were present in Antela and El Parque, while were absent from Tziscao where several wildfires had occurred. Fuel accumulation in sites within protected areas subject to fire exclusion policies was very high (40-68 t ha-1); in contrast, it was the lowest in rural Antela (24 t ha-1). Considering vegetation vulnerability to wildfires associated with extreme humid-dry climate events, increased fire hazard due to fuel accumulation, and the socio-ecological impacts of these events, we recommend revising the fire exclusion policies currently implemented in the LMNP and applying an integrated fire management approach that incorporates local socio-ecological conditions.
Details
- ISSN :
- 19717458
- Volume :
- 14
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- iForest - Biogeosciences and Forestry
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....dc62ecb77118a2a16fabdae658e8ae90