Giant Sequoias and Fire
The Giant Sequoia (Sequoiadendron giganteum) is truly the
most awesome species in the Sierra Nevada ecosystem. As in other
living communities, sequoia groves - and the mixed conifer forests
that contain them - have evolved with and adapted to natural processes
that must continue if the community is to remain healthy. Fire
is one of the major processes essential to the health of giant
sequoia groves.
In the early 1960s, Dr. Richard Hartesveldt explored the connection
between fire and sequoia regeneration. His small-scale prescribed
fires followed nearly a century of fire suppression, and resulted
in the germination of sequoia seeds and the recruitment of sequoia
seedlings - something that had not occurred in the absence of
fire.
Since those first experiments, researchers have further shown
the benefits to sequoias from fire. Dendrochronology has determined
that low intensity surface fires swept through the big trees approximately
every 5 to 15 years. Sequoias rely on fire to release most seeds
from their cones, to expose bare mineral soil in which seedlings
can take root, to recycle nutrients into the soil, and to open
holes in the forest canopy through which sunlight can reach young
seedlings.
Sequoias also need fire to reduce competition from species such
as white fir (Abies concolor) and Incense cedar (Calocedrus
decurrens), which are shade-tolerant and able to recruit seedlings
in heavy litter and duff. Fire suppression has resulted in heavy
accumulation of forest litter and the encroachment of thick stands
of white fir and incense cedar, both of which compete with sequoias
for water and nutrients. A natural fire cycle thins these competing
species, and provides suitable conditions for sequoia growth.
Return to the Fire and Park Resources
page to read some of the research papers that have been written
on fire and Giant Sequoias.
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