Effects of fire in tallgrass prairie on growth and reproduction of prairie coneflower (Ratibida columnifera: Asteraceae)

TitleEffects of fire in tallgrass prairie on growth and reproduction of prairie coneflower (Ratibida columnifera: Asteraceae)
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication1991
AuthorsHarnett, DC
JournalAmerican Journal of Botany
Volume78
Pagination429 -435
Accession NumberKNZ00318
Keywordstallgrass prairie
Abstract

Effects of fire on growth and reproduction of the perennial forb Ratibida columnifera were studied on the Konza Prairie Research Natural Area in northeastern Kansas, USA. Populations were sampled in seven different tallgrass prairie watersheds that varied in fire frequency and in the number of years elapsed since the last fire. Plants from sites not burned for many years were 2.6 times larger and produced 50% more stems than plants from recently burned sites. Number of seeds per plant was also higher in long-unburned sites due to greater numbers of flower heads per plant and greater numbers of achenes produced per head. Reproduction effort (ratio of inflorescence biomass to total vegetative biomass) was 33% lower in annually burned prairie than in any of the other sites. Significant differences in the relationships of inflorescence biomass to vegetative plant biomass in burned vs unburned sites indicated that burning causes direct changes in plant reproductive effort independent from its effects on plant size. There was no clear relationship between patterns of seed production among sites and patterns of R. columnifera abundance. Ratibida columnifera responses to fire are most likely a result of changes in the relative competitive abilities of forbs and the dominant perennial grasses due to post-fire changes in abiotic conditions rather than a result of direct effects of fire on the fate of buds and subsequent vegetative and floral development

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