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Effects of dormant- vs. growing-season fire in shortgrass steppe: Biological soil crust and perennial grass responses

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Ford, Paulette L, and Johnson, Gordon V, Effects of dormant- vs. growing-season fire in shortgrass steppe: Biological soil crust and perennial grass responses: .

Summary

This research experimentally examined seasonal effects of fire on biological soil crusts and perennial grasses in shortgrass steppe. We predicted dormant-season fire would have greater negative effects on biological soil crusts than fire during the growing season, but less of an impact on perennial grasses than fire during the growing season. Treatments were dormant- and growing-season fires and unburned reference condition plots. Response variables included biological soil crust and grass percent ground cover, and crust nitrogen fixation and chlorophyll a content. Results indicated shortgrass steppe can recover from fire in three to 30 months, dependent on fire season. Burning during the dormant-season had little effect on grass cover, [...]

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  • Upper Colorado River Basin

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From Source - Mendeley RIS Export <br> On - Wed Sep 19 08:12:57 MDT 2012

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Title Citation Effects of dormant- vs. growing-season fire in shortgrass steppe: Biological soil crust and perennial grass responses

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