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You are here >1Up Info > Wildlife, Animals, and Plants > Plant Species > Tree > Species: Acer rubrum | Red Maple
 

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FIRE ECOLOGY

SPECIES: Acer rubrum | Red Maple
FIRE ECOLOGY OR ADAPTATIONS : Red maple is a common fire type in the Acadian Forest of New Brunswick, where mean fire intervals have been estimated at 370 years [32]. In the New Jersery Pine Barrens, mean fire intervals averaged 20 years in the early 1900's, but due to a variety of factors including fire suppression and increased prescribed burning, now average 65 years [34]. Red maple regeneration in the Pine Barrens is favored in the absence of fire [34]. In upland oak forests of central Pennsylvania fire suppression has led to the replacement of oaks by red maple, beech, black cherry, and sugar maple [71]. Red maple has also increased in the absence of fire throughout much of the Southeast [11]. In parts of the Appalachians, fire suppression has allowed maple stems to grow large enough and develop bark thick enough to enable them to survive fires [47]. As a result, restoration to presettlement conditions would be "a very long-term process" [47]. Red maple sprouts vigorously from the root crown after aboveground vegetation is killed by fire [87]. Seedling establishment may also occur [87]. POSTFIRE REGENERATION STRATEGY : survivor species; on-site surviving root crown or caudex off-site colonizer; seed carried by wind; postfire yrs 1 and 2

Related categories for Species: Acer rubrum | Red Maple

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Information Courtesy: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory. Fire Effects Information System

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