The effects of fire on forest structure and composition were studied in a severely fire-impacted landscape in the eastern Amazon. Extensive sampling of area forests was used to compare structure and compositional differences between burned and unburned forest stands. Burned forests were extremely heterogeneous, with substantial variation in forest structure and fire damage recorded over distances of <50 m. Unburned forest patches occurred within burned areas, but accounted for only six percent of the sample area. Canopy cover, living biomass, and living adult stem densities decreased with increasing fire intensity/frequency, and were as low as 10-30 percent of unburned forest values. Even light burns removed >70 percent of the sapling and vine populations. Pioneer abundance increased dramatically with burn intensity, with pioneers dominating the understory in severely damaged areas. Species richness was inversely related to burn severity, but no clear pattern of species selection was observed. Fire appears to be a cyclical event in the study region: <30 percent of the burned forest sample had been subjected to only one burn. Based on estimated solar radiation intensities, burning substantially increases fire susceptibility of forests. At least 50 percent of the total area of all burned forests is predicted to become flammable within 16 rainless days, as opposed to only 4 percent of the unburned forest. In heavily burned forest subjected to recurrent fires, 95 percent of the area is predicted to become flammable in <9 rain-free days. As a recurrent disturbance phenomenon, fire shows unparalleled potential to impoverish and alter the forests of the eastern Amazon.
Biotropica is the journal of The Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation. Published quarterly, Biotropica reaches over 1,500 subscribers around the world. Biotropica publishes reports of original research, reviews, and commentaries on the ecology, conservation, and management of all tropical ecosystems and on the evolution, behavior, and population biology of tropical organisms. The journal has an editorial board of 30 subject editors.
The Association for Tropical Biology was founded in 2014 to promote research and to foster the exchange of ideas among biologists working in tropical environments. The ATB is building its reputation on the publication of a high-quality, widely-cited journals and on the sponsorship of international symposia on diverse tropical issues. Our international newsletter with news for tropical biologists will begin publication in Q4 2017.
This item is part of a JSTOR Collection.
For terms and use, please refer to our
Biotropica
© 1999 Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation