Maintenance and post-fire rehabilitation of perennial bunchgrasses is important for reducing the spread of annual grass species in low elevation big sagebrush plant communities. Post-fire rehabilitation decisions are hampered by a lack of tools for determining extent of fire-induced perennial grass mortality. Our objective was to correlate post-fire characteristics with perennial bunchgrass mortality at the plant and plant community scales. We recorded post-fire basal area, percent char, depth of burn, and soil color for 174 bunchgrasses across four ecological sites within a 65,000 ha summer wildfire in southeast Oregon and assessed plant mortality one year post-fire. Mortality varied by post-fire soil color and ecological site; soil colors associated with pre-fire shrub presence (black and gray) had up to 5 fold-higher mortality than brown soils typical of interspace locations. Models incorporating depth of burn and soil color correctly predicted mortality for 90% of individual plants; cover of brown soil explained 88% of the variation in bunchgrass mortality at the plant community scale. Our results indicate that soil color and depth of burn are accurate predictors of bunchgrass mortality at individual plant and plant community scales and could be used to determine spatial allocation of post-fire bunchgrass rehabilitation effort.
Oral presentation and poster titles, abstracts, and authors from the Society for Range Management (SRM) Annual Meetings and Tradeshows, from 2013 forward.