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You are here >1Up Info > Wildlife, Animals, and Plants > Plant Species > Tree > Species: Betula papyrifera | Paper Birch
 

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FIRE EFFECTS

SPECIES: Betula papyrifera | Paper Birch
IMMEDIATE FIRE EFFECT ON PLANT : Fire generally kills or top-kills most paper birch trees; the thin, flammable bark makes the bole highly susceptible to girdling even by light surface fires [17,21,31]. Although the bark of older trees is thicker, it is also more flammable once it begins to exfoliate [39]. Paper birch seeds on the ground are destroyed by fire. Summer fires do not necessarily consume the catkins, but immature seeds will not ripen on killed or top-killed trees [63]. DISCUSSION AND QUALIFICATION OF FIRE EFFECT : On the Chippewa National Forest in Minnesota, prescribed burning in mid-May in aspen slash top-killed all 4- to 15-inch-diameter (10-38 cm) paper birch trees. These sprouted within a few weeks of the fire, but sprout mortality over the next few years resulted in 11 percent of the original trees dead by postfire year 5 [49]. Low-intensity prescribed surface fires (mean flame length > 1 foot [0.3 m], mean rate of spread of 10.8 feet [3.3 m] per minute) in a 30-year-old mixed hardwood stand in central Wisconsin did not kill or top-kill any paper birch trees greater than 4 inches (10 cm) in trunk diameter. Most of the saplings less than 4 inches in trunk diameter, however, were top-killed [54]. On the Kenai Peninsula, Alaska, 22 percent of paper birch trees were unaffected, while 78 percent had dead or partially dead aerial crowns 2 years after a light surface fire [69]. Forty-two percent of top-killed trees produced sprouts. Prescribed burning in a northern Wisconsin bracken fern (Pteridium aquilinum)-grassland killed 31 percent of paper birch trees present. The rest were top-killed but later sprouted. Basal area was reduced by 90 percent [68]. PLANT RESPONSE TO FIRE : Paper birch rapidly revegetates burned areas. Sprouts, and seedlings if seed trees are nearby, appear within the first postfire year. Sprout production: Young paper birch trees up to about 50 years old sprout prolifically and vigorously after fire. Sprouts appear a few weeks to 2 months after spring or summer fires but not until the following spring after late fall fires [35,50,61]. They grow rapidly and are often 20 to 40 inches (50-100 cm) tall after one growing season [1,35]. In Minnesota, 5-year-old postfire paper birch sprouts averaged 10 feet (3 m) in height [50]. Following prescribed spring fires at 5-year intervals in Idaho, paper birch averaged 31 to 58 basal sprouts per plant after each fire [35]. Sprout mortality is high in the first 5 postfire years, leaving a few to several sprouts per clump [50]. Seedling establishment: Mineral soils exposed by fire provide excellent paper birch seedbeds, but charred or partially removed organic layers prevent establishment. In Alaska, germination and subsequent seedling survival of artifically sown paper birch seed was abundant, practically nil, and nil on severely, moderately, and lightly burned test plots, respectively [73]. Undamaged trees within a burn or trees in nearby unburned stands are necessary for postfire seedling establishment. Where there are abundant seed trees, paper birch can easily establish 10's of thousands of seedlings per acre after fire [19,39,69]. In northern Saskatchewan, undamaged paper birch trees released 1 and 0.4 million seeds per acre (2.48 & 1 million/ha) in the first and second fall, respectively, following an April wildfire [4]. Because seed dispersal occurs in the fall, seedling establishment does not begin until the second postfire year [46]. Seedling establishment is generally greatest from postfire years 2 to 5 [3,46]. In Labrador, paper birch established by seed dated to within 15 years of fire, with subsequent seedling establishment lacking [21]. DISCUSSION AND QUALIFICATION OF PLANT RESPONSE : In white spruce forest types in interior Alaska, paper birch establishes thousands of seedlings and sprouts shortly after fire. Sampling fire-origin paper birch stands in Alaska, Lutz [39] observed an average of 8,000 seedlings and saplings per acre (19,760/ha) 1 year after fire. Four years afer fire, Foote [19] observed an average of 12,000 stems per acre (30,000/ha) of both seed and sprout origin that were 3 to 6 feet (1-2 m) tall. Between 26 and 45 years after the fire, these thinned to a few thousand per acre. Three years after a prescribed light surface fire in south-central Alaska, on a site stocked primarily with white spruce and paper birch, there were about 8,000 and 1,000 paper birch seedlings and sprouts, respectively, per acre (19,760 and 2,470/ha) [69]. Seedlings averaged 6 inches (15 cm) and sprouts 14 inches (35 cm) in height. FIRE MANAGEMENT CONSIDERATIONS : Prescribed fire can be used to prepare cut-over sites for paper birch seed regeneration. In Maine, prescribed burning following winter logging favored paper birch establishment more than other treatments did. Burning or disking following logging exposed mineral soils on more than 70 percent of the logged area, while logging alone during the summer or winter, resulted in only 5 percent mineral soil exposure. Fourteen seed trees per acre (35/ha) were left on each treatment site. Paper birch seedling establishment was as follows [78]: Treatment Posttreatment year 1 Posttreatment year 10 #/acre #/ha #/acre #/ha winter logging/disked 245,400 605,200 3,300 8,200 winter logging/burned 50,100 123,700 4,800 11,900 summer logging only 65,700 162,300 1,700 4,200 winter logging only 33,700 83,200 1,900 4,700 Prescribed fire can be used to enhance deer and moose winter habitat by killing late successional conifers and promoting early successional browse species such as paper birch [69]. It generally takes 3 to 5 years after fire for paper birch sprout and seedling growth to provide adequate browse for deer and moose [57]. Peak browse production is generally between 10 and 16 years after fire [57].

Related categories for Species: Betula papyrifera | Paper Birch

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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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