Abstract
We generated a series of maps to help alert and educate people to the pervasiveness of fire regime changes across the eastern United States. Using geographic information systems (GIS), fire regimes were assigned to spatial vegetation databases to depict past and current conditions. Comparisons revealed substantial reductions in fire throughout the East. The most dramatic shifts took place in the former Midwestern grasslands and across a broad swath of southern and central States where pine and oak communities historically dominated. Land-use changes (e.g., agricultural and forest-type conversions) and recent fire suppression largely explain these shifts. Fire regime change was least in northern hardwood systems, in the mixed mesophytic region, and within the Mississippi Embayment. Negative ecological consequences of prolonged fire suppression are mounting while restoration opportunities are waning.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Abrams M, (1992), Fire and the development of oak forests. BioScience, 42: 346–353
Abrams M, (1996), Distribution, historical development, and ecophysiological attributes of oak species in the eastern United States. Ann. Sci. For., 53: 487–512
Anderson RC, (1991), Presettlement forests of Illinois. pp.9–19 in Burger GV, Ebinger JE, Wilhelm GS (eds.), Proceedings of the Oak Woods Management Workshop, Eastern Illinois University, Charleston, IL, 65–73
Anderson RC, Schwegman JE, Anderson MR, (2000), Micro-scale restoration: A 25-year history of a southern Illinois Barrens. Restoration Ecology, 8: 296–306
Barden LS, (1979), Tree replacement in small canopy gaps of a Tsuga canadensis forest in the southern Appalachians, Tennessee. Oecologia, 44: 141–142
Bazzaz FA, (1979), The physiological ecology of plant succession. Ann. Rev. Ecol. Syst., 10: 351–371
Benton MJ, Twitchett RJ, (2003), How to kill (almost) all life: the end-Permian extinction event. TRENDS in Ecology and Evolution 18(7): 358–365
Bowles ML, Hutchison MD, McBride JL, (1994), Landscape pattern and structure of oak savanna, woodland, and barrens in northeastern Illinois at the time of European settlement. P. 65–73 in J.S. Fralish, R.C. Anderson, J.E. Ebinger, and R. Szafoni (eds), Proceedings of the North American Conference on Barrens and Savannas, October 15-16, 1994, Illinois State University, Normal, IL
Chapman HH, (1932a), Is the longleaf type a climax? Ecology, 13: 328–334
Chapman HH, (1932b), Some further relations of fire to longleaf pine. Journal of Forestry, 30: 602–603
Christensen NL, (1991), Wilderness and high intensity fire: How much is enough? Tall Timbers Fire Ecology Conference Proceedings, 17: 9–24
Cleland DT, Crow TR, Saunders SC, Dickman DI, Maclean AL, Jordan JK, Watson RL, Sloan AM, Brosofske KD, (2004), Characterizing historical and modern fire regimes in Michigan (USA): A landscape ecosystem approach. Landscape Ecology, 19: 311–325
Clements FE, (1916), Plant succession: An analysis of the development of vegetation. Carnegie Institute Washington Publication No. 242
Cogbill CV, Burk J, Motzkin G, (2002), The forests of presettlement New England, USA: Spatial and compositional patterns based on town proprietor surveys. Journal of Biogeography, 29: 1279–1304
Cook SF, (1973), The significance of disease in the extinction of the New England Indians. Human Biology, 45: 485–508
Cottam G, (1949), The phytosociology of an oak wood in southwestern Wisconsin. Ecology, 30: 271–287
Cronon W, (1983), Changes in the land: Indians, colonists and the ecology of New England. Hill and Wang, New York, NY
Cutter BE, Guyette RP, (1994), Fire frequency on an oak-hickory ridgetop in the Missouri Ozarks. American Midland Naturalist, 132: 393–398
Denevan WM, (1992), The pristine myth: The landscape of the Americas in 1492. Annals of the Association of American Gegraphers 82: 369–385
Denslow JS, (1980), Patterns of plant species diversity during succession under different disturbance regimes. Oecologia, 46: 18–21
Ebinger JE, McClain WE, (1991), Forest succession in the Prairie Peninsula of Illinois. Illinois Natural History Survey, 34:375–381
Fahey TJ, Reiners WA, (1981), Fire in the forests of Maine and New Hampshire. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, 108: 362–373
Foti TL, (2001), Presettlement forests of the Black Swamp Area, Cache River, Woodruff County, Arkansas, from notes of the first land survey. P. 7–15 in P.B. Hamel, and T.L. Foti (eds), Bottomland hardwoods of the Mississippi Alluvial Valley: Characteristics and management of natural function, structure, and composition. USDA Forest Service General Technical Report SRS-42
Frelich LE, (2002), Forest dynamics and disturbance regimes: Studies from temperate evergreendeciduous forests. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK
Frelish JS, Crooks FB, Chambers JL, Harty FM, (1991), Comparison of presettlement secondgrowth and old-growth forest on six site types in the Illinois Shawnee Hills. American Midland Naturalist, 125: 294–309
Frost CC, (1998), Presettlement fire frequency regimes of the United States: A first approximation. Tall Timbers Fire Ecology Conference Proceedings, 20: 70–81
Graham SA, Harrison RP Jr., Westell CE Jr., (1963), Aspens: Phoenix trees of the Great Lakes region. University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor, MI
Greene SW, (1931), The forest that fire made. American Forests, 37: 583–584, 618
Grime JP, (1977), Evidence for the existence of three primary strategies in plants and its relevance to ecological and evolutionary theory. American Naturalist, 111: 1169–1194
Grimm EC, (1984), Fire and other factors controlling the Big Woods vegetation of Minnesota in the Mid-Nineteenth Century. Ecological Monographs, 54: 291–311
Grimmett, HK, (1989), Early plant and animal communities of the Arkansas Delta. Arkansas Historical Quarterly, 48: 101–107
Heinselman ML, (1973), Fire in the virgin forests of the Boundary Waters Canoe Area, Minnesota. Quaternary Research, 3: 329–382
Hengst GE, Dawson JO, (1994), Bark properties and fire resistance of selected tree species from the central hardwood region of North America. Canadian Journal of Forest Research, 24: 688–696
Henry JD, Swan JMA, (1974), Reconstructing forest history from live and dead plant material—an approach to the study of forest succession in southwest New Hampshire. Ecology, 55: 772–783
Iverson LR, Risser PG, (1987), Analyzing long-term changes in vegetation with geographic information system and remotely sensed data. Advances in Space Research, 7: 183–194
Jackson AS, (1965), Wildfires in the Great Plains grasslands. Tall Timbers Fire Ecology Conference Proceedings 4: 241–259
Jackson MB, Colmer TD, (2005), Response and adaptation by plants to flooding stress. Annals of Botany, 96: 501–505
Jackson WD, (1968), Fire, air, water and earth—an elemental ecology of Tasmania. Proceedings of the Ecological Society of Australia 3: 9–16
Kaatz MR, (1955), The Black Swamp: A study in historical geography. Annuals of the Association of American Geographers 45:1–35
Kilburn PD, (1960), Effects of logging and fire on xerophytic forests in Northern Michigan. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical, Club, 87: 402–405
Komarek EV Sr., (1965), Fire ecology—grasslands and man. Tall Timbers Fire Ecology Conference Proceedings, 4: 169–220
Komarek EV Sr., (1967), Fire—and the ecology of man. Tall Timbers Fire Ecology Conference Proceedings, 6: 143–170
Landers JL, (1991), Disturbance influences on pine traits in the southeastern United States. Tall Timbers Fire Ecology Conference Proceedings, 17: 61–98
Lemon PC, (1967), Effects of fire on herbs of the southeastern United States and central Africa. Tall Timbers Fire Ecology Conference Proceedings, 6: 113–127
Lewis HT, (1993), Patterns of Indian burning in California: Ecology and ethnohistory, pp 55–116 in Blackburn TC, Anderson K (eds.), Before the wilderness: Environmental management by Native Californians, Ballena Press, Menlo Park, CA
Little S, (1974), Effects of fire on temperate forests: Northeastern United States, pp 225–250 in Kozlowski TT, Ahlgren CE (eds.), Fire and ecosystems. Academic Press, New York, NY
Loomis WE, McComb AL, (1944), Recent advances of the forest in Iowa. Iowa Academy of Science, 51: 217–224
Lorimer CG, (1985), The role of fire in the perpetuation of oak forests, pp 8–25 in Johnson J (ed.), Challenges in oak management and utilization, University of Wisconsin Cooperative Extension Service, Madison, WI
MacCleery DW, (1996), American forests: A history of resiliency and recovery. Forest History Society Issues Series, Forest History Society, Durham, NC
McComb AL, Loomis WE, (1944), Subclimax prairie. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, 71: 46–76
McElwain, JC, Punyasena JC, (2007), Mass extinction events and the plant fossil record. Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 22: 548–557
Mutch RW, (1970), Wildland fires and ecosystems—A hypothesis. Ecology, 51: 1046–1051
Nelson, JC, (1997), Presettlement vegetation patterns along the 5th Principal Meridian, Missouri Territory, 1815. American Midland Naturalist, 137: 79–94
Nowacki GJ, Abrams MD, (1992), Community, edaphic, and historical analysis of mixed oak forests of the Ridge and Valley Province in central Pennsylvania. Canadian Journal of Forest Research, 22: 790–800
Nowacki GJ, Abrams MD, Lorimer CG, (1990), Composition, structure, and historical development of northern red oak stand along an edaphic gradient in north-central Wisconsin. Forest Science, 36: 276–292
Nuzzo V, (1986), Extent and status of Midwest oak savanna: Presettlement and 1985. Natural Areas Journal, 6: 6–36
Oliver CD, Larson BC, (1996), Forest Stand Dynamics. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York, NY
Oliver CD, Stephens EP, (1977), Reconstruction of a mixed-species forest in central New England. Ecology, 58: 562–572
Osmond CB, Austin MP, Berry JA, Billings WD, Boyer JS, Dacey JWH, Nobel PS, Smith SD, Winner WE, (1987), Stress physiology and the distribution of plants. BioScience, 37(1): 38–48
Pahl-Wostl C, (1995), The dynamic nature of ecosystems: Chaos and order entwined. John Wiley & Sons Ltd., Chichester, England
Patterson WA III, (1991), The 1947 Maine fires: The last great fires in New England? Tall Timbers Fire Ecology Conference Proceedings, 17: 59
Pickett STA, White PS, (1985), The ecology of natural disturbance and patch dynamics. Academic Press, Inc., San Diego, CA
Pyne SJ, (1982), Fire in America: A cultural history of wildland and rural fire. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ
Reice SR, (2001), The silver lining: The benefits of natural disasters. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ
Runkle JR, (1981), Gap regeneration in some old-growth forests of eastern United States. Ecology, 62: 1041–1051
Runkle JR, (1982), Patterns of disturbance in some old-growth forests of eastern North America. Ecology, 63: 1533–1546
Sauer CO, (1975), Man’s dominance by use of fire. Geoscience and Man, 10: 1–13
Schmidt KM, Menakis, JP, Hardy CC, Hann WJ, Bunnell, DL, (2002), Development of coarsescale spatial data for wildland fire and fuel management. USDA Forest Service General Technical Report RMRS-GTR-87
Schulte LA, Crow TR, Vissage J, Cleland D, (2003), Seventy years of forest change in the Northern Great Lakes Region, USA. pp 99–101 in Buse LJ, Perera AH (comp.), Meeting emerging ecological, economic, and social challenges in the Great Lakes region: Popular summaries. Ontario Forest Research Information Paper No. 155, Ontario Ministry of Forest Research Institute, Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada
Seischab FK, (1990), Presettlement forests of the Phelps and Gorham Purchase in western New York. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, 117: 27–38
Stewart OC, (1956), Fire as the first great force employed by man. pp 115–133 in Thomas WH (ed.), Man’s role in changing the face of the earth. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, IL
Stewart, OC, (2002), Forgotten fires: Native Americans and the transient wilderness. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, OK
Tingle JL, Klimas CV, Foti TL, (2001), Application of General Land Office Survey notes to bottomland hardwood ecosystem management and restoration in the Lower Mississippi Valley—An example from Desha County, Arkansas. pp 16–27 in P.B. Hamel, and T.L. Foti (eds), Bottomland hardwoods of the Mississippi Alluvial Valley: Characteristics and management of natural function, structure, and composition. USDA Forest Service General Technical Report SRS-42
Transeau EN, (1935), The prairie peninsula. Ecology, 16: 423–437
Van Lear DH, Waldrop TA, (1989), History, uses, and effects of fire in the Appalachians. USDA Forest Service General Technical Report SE-54
Wade DD, Brock BL, Brose PH, Grace JB, Hoch GA, Patterson WA III, (2000), Fire in eastern ecosystems pp 53–238 (Chapter 4) in Brown JK, Smith JK (eds.), Wildland fire in ecosystems: Effects of fire on flora. USDA Forest Service General Technical Report RMRS-GTR-42-Vol. 2. (http://www.fs.fed.us/rm/pubs/rmrs_gtr42_2.pdf)
Walker J, Peet RK, (1983), Composition and species diversity of pine-wiregrass savannas of the Green Swamp, North Carolina. Vegetatio, 55: 163–179
Watt AS, (1947), Pattern and process in the plant community. Journal of Ecology, 35: 1–22
Wells PV, (1970), Historical factors controlling vegetation patterns and floristic distributions in the Central Plains Region of North America, pp 212–221 in Dort W, Jones J (eds.), Pleistocene and recent environments of the Central Great Plains. University of Kansas Special Publication No. 3, Lawrence, KS
Whitney GG, (1986), Relation of Michigan’s presettlement pine forests to substrate and disturbance history. Ecology, 67: 1548–1559
Whitney GG, DeCant JP, (2003), Physical and historical determinants of the pre-and postsettlement forests of northwestern Pennsylvania. Canadian Journal of Forest Research, 33:1683–1697
Wright HA, Bailey AW, (1982), Fire Ecology: United States and Southern Canada. John Wiley & Sons, New York, NY
Zicker WA, (1955), An analysis of Jefferson County vegetation using survey’s records and present day data. MS Thesis, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2013 Tsinghua University Press, Beijing and Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Nowacki, G.J., Carr, R.A. (2013). Altered Disturbance Regimes: the Demise of Fire in the Eastern United States. In: Qu, J.J., Sommers, W.T., Yang, R., Riebau, A.R. (eds) Remote Sensing and Modeling Applications to Wildland Fires. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-32530-4_21
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-32530-4_21
Publisher Name: Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg
Print ISBN: 978-3-642-32529-8
Online ISBN: 978-3-642-32530-4
eBook Packages: Earth and Environmental ScienceEarth and Environmental Science (R0)