2016
DOI: 10.1139/cjfr-2015-0305
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Long-term fire history of maple (Acer) forest sites in the central St. Lawrence Lowland, Quebec

Abstract: In the St-Lawrence lowlands, sugar maple (Acer saccharum Marsh.) is considered the dominant species of old-growth deciduous forests, whereas red maple (Acer rubrum L.) tends to dominate sites recently disturbed by logging and agricultural practices. Considering that the long-term influence of fire is not documented for such stands, we reconstructed the postglacial tree composition (as deduced from charcoal species) and fire history of a sugar maple stand (Ste-Françoise area) and a red maple stand (Villeroy are… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…According to recently published reports and this study, fires were frequent in the early Holocene in the current maple sites distributed across southern Quebec according both to macrocharcoal [23,27,30] (Figure 4) and micro-and mesocharcoal [25] data. The mid-Holocene was a period less-prone to fire occurrence both in the study area and the areas close to our Appalachian sites in the Saguenay [23] and the Quebec City [30] areas.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 55%
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“…According to recently published reports and this study, fires were frequent in the early Holocene in the current maple sites distributed across southern Quebec according both to macrocharcoal [23,27,30] (Figure 4) and micro-and mesocharcoal [25] data. The mid-Holocene was a period less-prone to fire occurrence both in the study area and the areas close to our Appalachian sites in the Saguenay [23] and the Quebec City [30] areas.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 55%
“…The mid-Holocene was a period less-prone to fire occurrence both in the study area and the areas close to our Appalachian sites in the Saguenay [23] and the Quebec City [30] areas. In southernmost Quebec, Elkadi [25] suggested declining fire occurrence at that time-as deduced from microcharcoal and pollen of Mégantic lake sediments-to be the result of the arrival and expansion of sugar maple forests which are thought to reduce fire propagation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 81%
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“…The same paleofire tendencies characterize the Bas-StLaurent region, situated west of the Gaspé Peninsula, and is highlighted by peaks in microcharcoal abundance in several lakes at the beginning of the Holocene (Richard et al 1992). The same fire frequency is again observable in macrocharcoal datings from the beginning of the Holocene in the region situated in the countryside around Rimouski, in the Saguenay, as well as in the greater Quebec City region (Talon et al 2005;Pilon and Payette 2015;Payette et al 2016;2017). The Mont-St-Pierre sugar maple site, also located in the northern part of the Gaspé Peninsula, shows a fire history resembling that of Forillon during the last millennium, where 6-8 fires occurred at an interval of 120-150 years (Pilon and Payette 2015).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 58%