Response of soil microbial communities to fire and fire-fighting chemicals

被引:43
作者
Barreiro, A. [1 ]
Martin, A. [1 ]
Carballas, T. [1 ]
Diaz-Ravina, M. [1 ]
机构
[1] CSIC, Inst Invest Agrobiol Galicia, E-15780 Santiago De Compostela, Spain
关键词
Fires; Fire-fighting chemicals; Microbial activity; PLFA pattern; FATTY-ACID ANALYSIS; FOREST SOILS; ORGANIC-MATTER; SHORT-TERM; RETARDANT; BIOMASS; QUALITY; DIVERSITY; WILDFIRE; TURKEY;
D O I
10.1016/j.scitotenv.2010.09.011
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Worldwide fire-fighting chemicals are rapidly gaining acceptance as an effective and efficient tool in wildfires control and in prescribed burns for habitat management. However despite its widespread use as water additives to control and/or slow the spread of fire information concerning the impact of these compounds on soil ecosystems is scarce In the present work we examine under field conditions the response of the microbial communities to three different fire-chemicals at normal doses of application The study was performed with a Humic Cambisol over granite under heath located in the temperate humid zone (Galicia NW Spain) with the following treatments unburned soil (US) and burned soil added with water alone (BS) or mixed with the foaming agent Auxquimica RFC-88 at 1% (BS + Fo) Firesorb at 15% (BS + FI) and FR Cross ammonium polyphosphate at 20% (BS + Ap) The microbial mass (microbial C) activity (beta-glucosidase urease) and community structure [phospholipids fatty acids (PLFA) pattern] were measured on soil samples collected at different sampling times during a 5 year period after a prescribed fire The results showed a negative short-term effect of the fire on the microbial properties The microbial biomass and activity levels tended to recover with time however changes in the microbial community structure (PLFA pattern) were still detected 5 years after the prescribed fire Compared to the burned soil added with water the ammonium polyphosphate and the Firesorb treatments were the fire-fighting chemicals that showed a higher influence on the microbial communities over the whole study period Our data indicated the usefulness of the PLFAs analysis to detect the long-term Impact of both fire and fire-fighting chemicals on the soil microbial communities and hence on the soil quality of forest ecosystems (C) 2010 Published by Elsevier BV
引用
收藏
页码:6172 / 6178
页数:7
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