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You are here >1Up Info > Wildlife, Animals, and Plants > Plant Species > Tree > Species: Pinus clausa | Sand Pine
 

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FIRE ECOLOGY

SPECIES: Pinus clausa | Sand Pine
FIRE ECOLOGY OR ADAPTATIONS : Sand pine is classified as fire-resistant because it regenerates profusely through seeds after fire. Mature trees have a low tolerance to fire because of thin bark [14]. Sand pine is maintained by infrequent, high-severity fires [1,16,17]. The dense crown canopy of sand pine reduces understory vegetation and fuel build-up on the ground. Most understory vegetation is evergreen which does not produce a thick litter of dry leaves, and there is little or no grass. Fire usually stalls out at the outside edge of a sand pine stand, but if the stand is ignited, a severe fire will occur. This delayed pyrogenic strategy results in instant site recapture [10]. Large numbers of seeds are released from serotinous cones and germinate on the exposed ground. Sand pine stands usually only burn in the spring when high winds carry fire into the crowns [5]. In addition, needle water content is at its lowest and ether content at its highest in the spring [22]. Sustained hot weather will also make the stand more susceptible to ignition [16]. Highly flammable Spanish moss (Tillandsia usneoides) accumulates on older sand pine and can be ignited by lightning or can elevate a ground fire to the crown [9]. Fire intervals of 20 to 60 years maintains even-aged sand pine stands [16,20]. If more frequent, trees may not be old enough to reproduce. If less frequent, sand pine becomes senescent and is replaced by oak. Sand pine communities are often intermixed with longleaf pine communities which burn every 3 to 8 years. Adjacent low-severity ground fires rarely ignite young sand pine stands. Richardson [20] reported that scrub allelopathy prevents grass and pine regeneration in sand pine communities and along the borders. Grasses and pine seedlings would otherwise provide fuel for surface fires. Choctawhatchee sand pine usually grows in areas free of fire. Open-coned forms of the Ocala variety also invade and establish in areas with no fire. Open-coned stand reestablishment after fire is dependent on trees located near the periphery of the burn. The degree of serotiny in Ocala and Choctawhatchee stands is probably a function of fire history [16]. Open-coned stands may have a history of no fire or frequent low-severity ground fires, whereas close-coned stands may have a history of infrequent but high-severity crown fires [12]. POSTFIRE REGENERATION STRATEGY : crown-stored residual colonizer; short-viability seed in on-site cones crown-stored residual colonizer; long-viability seed in on-site cones off-site colonizer; seed carried by wind; postfire years one and two

Related categories for Species: Pinus clausa | Sand Pine

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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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