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      Forest recovery following extreme drought in California, USA: natural patterns and effects of pre‐drought management

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          Abstract

          Rising temperatures and more frequent and severe droughts are driving increases in tree mortality in forests around the globe. However, in many cases, the likely trajectories of forest recovery following drought‐related mortality are poorly understood. In many fire‐suppressed western U.S. forests, management is applied to reverse densification and restore natural forest structure and species composition, but it is unclear how such management affects post‐mortality recovery. We addressed these uncertainties by examining forest stands that experienced mortality during the severe drought of 2012–2016 in California, USA. We surveyed post‐drought vegetation along a gradient of overstory mortality severity in paired treated (mechanically thinned or prescribed‐burned) and untreated areas in the Sierra Nevada. Treatment substantially reduced tree density, particularly in smaller tree size classes, and these effects persisted through severe drought‐related overstory mortality. However, even in treated areas with severe mortality (>67% basal area mortality), the combined density of residual (surviving) trees (mean 44 trees/ha) and saplings (mean 189 saplings/ha) frequently (86% of plots) fell within or exceeded the natural range of variation ( NRV) of tree density, suggesting little need for reforestation intervention to increase density. Residual tree densities in untreated high‐mortality plots were significantly higher (mean 192 trees/ha and 506 saplings/ha), and 96% of these plots met or exceeded the NRV. Treatment disproportionately removed shade‐tolerant conifer species, while mortality in the drought event was concentrated in pines ( Pinus ponderosa and P. lambertiana); as a consequence, the residual trees, saplings, and seedlings in treated areas, particularly those that had experienced moderate or high drought‐related mortality, were more heavily dominated by broadleaf (“hardwood”) trees (particularly Quercus kelloggii and Q. chrysolepis). In contrast, residual trees and regeneration in untreated stands were heavily dominated by shade‐tolerant conifer species ( Abies concolor and Calocedrus decurrens), suggesting a need for future treatment. Because increased dominance of hardwoods brings benefits for plant and animal diversity and stand resilience, the ecological advantages of mechanical thinning and prescribed fire treatments may, depending on the management perspective, extend even to stands that ultimately experience high drought‐related mortality following treatment.

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Ecological Applications
                Ecological Applications
                Wiley
                1051-0761
                1939-5582
                January 2020
                October 11 2019
                January 2020
                : 30
                : 1
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Department of Environmental Science and Policy University of California, Davis Davis California 95616 USA
                [2 ] USDA Forest Service Pacific Southwest Region, Southern Sierra Province Bishop California 93514 USA
                [3 ] USDA Forest Service Pacific Southwest Region, Central Sierra Province Placerville California 95667 USA
                [4 ] USDA Forest Service Pacific Southwest Region, Central Sierra Province South Lake Tahoe California 96150 USA
                [5 ] USDA Forest Service Pacific Southwest Region, Southern Sierra Province Clovis California 93611 USA
                [6 ] USDA Forest Service Pacific Southwest Region Vallejo California 94592 USA
                Article
                10.1002/eap.2002
                71e005d5-a43c-4ac7-a6de-7ac897e9f292
                © 2020

                http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor

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