Frequent fires prime plant developmental responses to burning

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Frequent fires prime plant developmental responses to burning. / Simpson, Kimberley J; Olofsson, Jill K; Ripley, Brad S; Osborne, Colin P.

In: Proceedings. Biological sciences, Vol. 286, No. 1909, 20191315, 28.08.2019.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Simpson, KJ, Olofsson, JK, Ripley, BS & Osborne, CP 2019, 'Frequent fires prime plant developmental responses to burning', Proceedings. Biological sciences, vol. 286, no. 1909, 20191315. https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2019.1315

APA

Simpson, K. J., Olofsson, J. K., Ripley, B. S., & Osborne, C. P. (2019). Frequent fires prime plant developmental responses to burning. Proceedings. Biological sciences, 286(1909), [20191315]. https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2019.1315

Vancouver

Simpson KJ, Olofsson JK, Ripley BS, Osborne CP. Frequent fires prime plant developmental responses to burning. Proceedings. Biological sciences. 2019 Aug 28;286(1909). 20191315. https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2019.1315

Author

Simpson, Kimberley J ; Olofsson, Jill K ; Ripley, Brad S ; Osborne, Colin P. / Frequent fires prime plant developmental responses to burning. In: Proceedings. Biological sciences. 2019 ; Vol. 286, No. 1909.

Bibtex

@article{ae692b0c77da4953996c0495e5c53b5c,
title = "Frequent fires prime plant developmental responses to burning",
abstract = "Coping with temporal variation in fire requires plants to have plasticity in traits that promote persistence, but how plastic responses to current conditions are affected by past fire exposure remains unknown. We investigate phenotypic divergence between populations of four resprouting grasses exposed to differing experimental fire regimes (annually burnt or unburnt for greater than 35 years) and test whether divergence persists after plants are grown in a common environment for 1 year. Traits relating to flowering and biomass allocation were measured before plants were experimentally burnt, and their regrowth was tracked. Genetic differentiation between populations was investigated for a subset of individuals. Historic fire frequency influenced traits relating to flowering and below-ground investment. Previously burnt plants produced more inflorescences and invested proportionally more biomass below ground, suggesting a greater capacity for recruitment and resprouting than unburnt individuals. Tiller-scale regrowth rate did not differ between treatments, but prior fire exposure enhanced total regrown biomass in two species. We found no consistent genetic differences between populations suggesting trait differences arose from developmental plasticity. Grass development is influenced by prior fire exposure, independent of current environmental conditions. This priming response to fire, resulting in adaptive trait changes, may produce communities more resistant to future fire regime changes.",
author = "Simpson, {Kimberley J} and Olofsson, {Jill K} and Ripley, {Brad S} and Osborne, {Colin P}",
year = "2019",
month = aug,
day = "28",
doi = "10.1098/rspb.2019.1315",
language = "English",
volume = "286",
journal = "Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences",
issn = "0962-8452",
publisher = "The Royal Society Publishing",
number = "1909",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Frequent fires prime plant developmental responses to burning

AU - Simpson, Kimberley J

AU - Olofsson, Jill K

AU - Ripley, Brad S

AU - Osborne, Colin P

PY - 2019/8/28

Y1 - 2019/8/28

N2 - Coping with temporal variation in fire requires plants to have plasticity in traits that promote persistence, but how plastic responses to current conditions are affected by past fire exposure remains unknown. We investigate phenotypic divergence between populations of four resprouting grasses exposed to differing experimental fire regimes (annually burnt or unburnt for greater than 35 years) and test whether divergence persists after plants are grown in a common environment for 1 year. Traits relating to flowering and biomass allocation were measured before plants were experimentally burnt, and their regrowth was tracked. Genetic differentiation between populations was investigated for a subset of individuals. Historic fire frequency influenced traits relating to flowering and below-ground investment. Previously burnt plants produced more inflorescences and invested proportionally more biomass below ground, suggesting a greater capacity for recruitment and resprouting than unburnt individuals. Tiller-scale regrowth rate did not differ between treatments, but prior fire exposure enhanced total regrown biomass in two species. We found no consistent genetic differences between populations suggesting trait differences arose from developmental plasticity. Grass development is influenced by prior fire exposure, independent of current environmental conditions. This priming response to fire, resulting in adaptive trait changes, may produce communities more resistant to future fire regime changes.

AB - Coping with temporal variation in fire requires plants to have plasticity in traits that promote persistence, but how plastic responses to current conditions are affected by past fire exposure remains unknown. We investigate phenotypic divergence between populations of four resprouting grasses exposed to differing experimental fire regimes (annually burnt or unburnt for greater than 35 years) and test whether divergence persists after plants are grown in a common environment for 1 year. Traits relating to flowering and biomass allocation were measured before plants were experimentally burnt, and their regrowth was tracked. Genetic differentiation between populations was investigated for a subset of individuals. Historic fire frequency influenced traits relating to flowering and below-ground investment. Previously burnt plants produced more inflorescences and invested proportionally more biomass below ground, suggesting a greater capacity for recruitment and resprouting than unburnt individuals. Tiller-scale regrowth rate did not differ between treatments, but prior fire exposure enhanced total regrown biomass in two species. We found no consistent genetic differences between populations suggesting trait differences arose from developmental plasticity. Grass development is influenced by prior fire exposure, independent of current environmental conditions. This priming response to fire, resulting in adaptive trait changes, may produce communities more resistant to future fire regime changes.

U2 - 10.1098/rspb.2019.1315

DO - 10.1098/rspb.2019.1315

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 31431130

VL - 286

JO - Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences

JF - Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences

SN - 0962-8452

IS - 1909

M1 - 20191315

ER -

ID: 235066225