Soil Resistance to Burn Severity in Different Forest Ecosystems in the Framework of a Wildfire

被引:16
作者
Huerta, Sara [1 ]
Fernandez-Garcia, Victor [1 ]
Calvo, Leonor [1 ]
Marcos, Elena [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Leon, Fac Biol & Environm Sci, Dept Biodivers & Environm Management, Area Ecol, Leon 24071, Spain
关键词
biochemical properties; burn severity; chemical properties; physical properties; soil resistance; wildfire; PRONE PINE ECOSYSTEMS; FIRE SEVERITY; ORGANIC-MATTER; PHYSICAL-PROPERTIES; PRESCRIBED FIRE; MICROBIOLOGICAL PROPERTIES; PHOSPHATASE-ACTIVITY; MEDITERRANEAN BASIN; MICROBIAL BIOMASS; TERM;
D O I
10.3390/f11070773
中图分类号
S7 [林业];
学科分类号
0829 ; 0907 ;
摘要
Recent changes in fire regimes, with more frequent, extensive, and severe fires, are modifying soil characteristics. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of burn severity on the resistance of some physical, chemical, and biochemical soil properties in three different forest ecosystems affected by a wildfire in the northwest of the Iberian Peninsula. We evaluated burn severity immediately after fire using the Composite Burn Index (CBI) in three different ecosystems: shrublands, heathlands, and oak forests. In the same field plots used to quantify CBI, we took a composite soil sample to analyse physical (mean weight diameter (MWD)), chemical (pH; total C; total organic C (TOC); total inorganic C (TIC); total N; available P; exchangeable cations Na+, K+, Mg2+, and Ca2+; and cation exchange capacity (CEC)), and biochemical (beta-glucosidase, urease, and acid phosphatase enzyme activities) properties. The resistance index of each property was then calculated. Based on our results, the values of the soil chemical properties tended to increase immediately after fire. Among them, total C, TOC, and exchangeable Na(+)showed higher resistance to change, with less variation concerning pre-fire status. The resistance of chemical properties was higher in the oak forest ecosystem. MWD decreased at high severity in all ecosystems, but soils in shrublands were more resistant. We found a high decrease in soil enzymatic activity with burn severity, with biochemical properties being the least resistant to change. Therefore, the enzymatic activity of soil could be a potential indicator of severity in forest ecosystems recently affected by wildfires.
引用
收藏
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
[21]   The complex impacts of fire on soil ecosystems: Insights from the 2021 Aspromonte National Park wildfire [J].
Oliva, Mariateresa ;
Maffia, Angela ;
Marra, Federica ;
Canino, Francesco ;
Battaglia, Santo ;
Mallamaci, Carmelo ;
Muscolo, Adele .
JOURNAL OF FORESTRY RESEARCH, 2025, 36 (01)
[22]   Assessing Wildfire Burn Severity and Its Relationship with Environmental Factors: A Case Study in Interior Alaska Boreal Forest [J].
Smith, Christopher W. ;
Panda, Santosh K. ;
Bhatt, Uma S. ;
Meyer, Franz J. ;
Badola, Anushree ;
Hrobak, Jennifer L. .
REMOTE SENSING, 2021, 13 (10)
[23]   Resilience in soil bacterial communities of the boreal forest from one to five years after wildfire across a severity gradient [J].
Whitman, Thea ;
Woolet, Jamie ;
Sikora, Miranda ;
Johnson, Dana B. ;
Whitman, Ellen .
SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY, 2022, 172
[24]   Soil moisture variation and dynamics across a wildfire burn boundary in a loblolly pine (Pinus taeda) forest [J].
Cardenas, M. Bayani ;
Kanarek, Michael R. .
JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY, 2014, 519 :490-502
[25]   Assessment of Burn Severity and Monitoring of the Wildfire Recovery Process in Mongolia [J].
Vandansambuu, Battsengel ;
Gantumur, Byambakhuu ;
Wu, Falin ;
Byambasuren, Oyunsanaa ;
Bayarsaikhan, Sainbuyan ;
Chantsal, Narantsetseg ;
Batsaikhan, Nyamdavaa ;
Bao, Yuhai ;
Vandansambuu, Batbayar ;
Jimseekhuu, Munkh-Erdene .
FIRE-SWITZERLAND, 2023, 6 (10)
[26]   Relationships between tree stand density and burn severity as measured by the Composite Burn Index following a ponderosa pine forest wildfire in the American Southwest [J].
Amato, Victoria J. W. ;
Lightfoot, David ;
Stropki, Cody ;
Pease, Michael .
FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2013, 302 :71-84
[27]   Influence of wildfire severity on soil physical degradation in two pine forest stands of NW Spain [J].
Varela, M. E. ;
Benito, E. ;
Keizer, J. J. .
CATENA, 2015, 133 :342-348
[28]   Learning from wildfires: A scalable framework to evaluate treatment effects on burn severity [J].
Chamberlain, Caden P. ;
Meigs, Garrett W. ;
Churchill, Derek J. ;
Kane, Jonathan T. ;
Sanna, Astrid ;
Begley, James S. ;
Prichard, Susan J. ;
Kennedy, Maureen C. ;
Bienz, Craig ;
Haugo, Ryan D. ;
Smith, Annie C. ;
Kane, Van R. ;
Cansler, C. Alina .
ECOSPHERE, 2024, 15 (12)
[29]   Effects of wildfire and topography on soil nitrogen availability in a boreal larch forest of northeastern China [J].
Kong, Jian-Jian ;
Yang, Jian ;
Chu, Haiyan ;
Xiang, Xingjia .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WILDLAND FIRE, 2015, 24 (03) :433-442
[30]   Variability and drivers of burn severity in the northwestern Canadian boreal forest [J].
Whitman, Ellen ;
Parisien, Marc-Andre ;
Thompson, Dan K. ;
Hall, Ronald J. ;
Skakun, Robert S. ;
Flannigan, Mike D. .
ECOSPHERE, 2018, 9 (02)