Disturbance from fire can affect the abundance and distribution of shrubs and grasses in arid ecosystems. Specifically, fire may increase grass and forb production while hindering shrub encroachment. Therefore, prescribed fires are a common management tool for maintaining grassland habitats in the southwest. However, Bouteloua eriopoda (black grama), a dominant species in
Results/Conclusions
Following the prescribed fire, there were fewer individual grass clumps and less above ground grass cover in burned areas compared to unburned areas. This decrease in productivity was primarily from a loss of B. eriopoda. Specifically, B. eriopoda density and cover were significantly lower following the fire with a slow recovery in the 5 years following the fire. Other grasses showed no such adverse response to burning. We found more species in burned areas than unburned areas for all years except 2006, when the area had exceptionally higher summer rainfall. Forb species showed a similar pattern across all years. Grass species composition, richness and abundance did not differ between burned and unburned areas or among years. Furthermore, forb cover for most years in both spring and fall was higher in the burned area. In 2006 and 2008, though, there was significantly less forb cover in the spring. Winter precipitation previous to these two springs was less than 15 mm. Therefore, fire negatively affects the dominant grass species while increasing forb cover and richness. However, extreme precipitation events decrease the effects of fire in this arid grassland.