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You are here >1Up Info > Wildlife, Animals, and Plants > Plant Species > Tree > Species: Quercus velutina | Black Oak
 

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FIRE ECOLOGY

SPECIES: Quercus velutina | Black Oak
FIRE ECOLOGY OR ADAPTATIONS : Black oak is moderately resistant to fire [11]. Small black oaks are easily top-killed by fire but sprout vigorously from the root crown [56]. Larger black oaks can withstand low-severity surface fire because of moderately thick basal bark. They are susceptible to basal wounding [11]. The prevalent presettlement upland oak forests in the eastern and central United States were associated with recurring fire. These forests probably burned at an intermediate frequency (50 to 100 year intervals) which promoted the dominance and stability of oak [1]. Fire provides opportunity for establishment of the more fire-resistant oak species such as black oak [34]. Black oak is characteristic as a community dominant only where major disturbances periodically open the canopy [25]. In dry black oak savannas in Illinois and Wisconsin, an age analysis of black oaks showed that recruitment of the oaks to the canopy was related to distinct events, most likely fire. Fire top-kills the mesic hardwood understory and allows oak sprouts to compete successfully [5]. Oak-hickory forest floors are usually not conducive to high-severity fires, but fires are easily ignited. The total forest floor fuelbed weight in a 20-year-old stand of black oak in southeast Missouri averaged 6.4 tons per acre (14.3 t/ha), 2.0 tons per acre (4.8 t/ha) of which was loose leaf litter. Forty-year-old stands averaged 8.3 tons of forest floor per acre (18.6 t/ha), including 2.9 tons per acre (6.5 t/ha) of loose litter [13]. Because of the reduction in wildfire frequency, oak-hickory forests are converting to more mixed mesophytic stands. Fifty-five years after a late summer fire in south-central Connecticut, the burned area had higher absolute and relative amounts of oak (black, white, scarlet, chestnut, and northern red) than the adjacent unburned area [65]. In Indiana, late successional species (red maple, sassafras, and blackgum) were present in a black oak-dominated community in Indiana where fire had been suppressed. In an adjacent but remote black oak community, late successional species were not present because fires burned longer before being noticed and suppressed. In the more frequently burned area, overstory trees were rarely killed by fire, and an open understory was maintained. Where infrequent, fires killed larger trees and promoted the formation of an understory thicket [25]. Black oak is restricted from the pine-scrub oak communities of the New Jersey Pine Barrens because it does not produce viable seed at a young enough age to become established in areas that burn every 8 to 12 years [37]. POSTFIRE REGENERATION STRATEGY : Tree with adventitious-bud root crown/root sucker

Related categories for Species: Quercus velutina | Black Oak

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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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