Forest Vegetation Change and Its Impacts on Soil Water Following 47 Years of Managed Wildfire

被引:0
作者
Jens T. Stevens
Gabrielle F. S. Boisramé
Ekaterina Rakhmatulina
Sally E. Thompson
Brandon M. Collins
Scott L. Stephens
机构
[1] U.S. Geological Survey,Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management
[2] New Mexico Landscapes Field Station,Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
[3] University of California Berkeley,Division of Hydrologic Sciences
[4] University of California Berkeley,Department of Civil, Environmental and Mining Engineering
[5] Desert Research Institute,undefined
[6] University of Western Australia,undefined
来源
Ecosystems | 2020年 / 23卷
关键词
Ecohydrology; Fire; Soil moisture; Vegetation change; Forests; Sierra Nevada;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Managed wildfire is an increasingly relevant management option to restore variability in vegetation structure within fire-suppressed montane forests in western North America. Managed wildfire often reduces tree cover and density, potentially leading to increases in soil moisture availability, water storage in soils and groundwater, and streamflow. However, the potential hydrologic impacts of managed wildfire in montane watersheds remain uncertain and are likely context dependent. Here, we characterize the response of vegetation and soil moisture to 47 years (1971–2018) of managed wildfire in Sugarloaf Creek Basin (SCB) in Sequoia-Kings Canyon National Park in the Sierra Nevada, California, USA, using repeat plot measurements, remote sensing of vegetation, and a combination of continuous in situ and episodic spatially distributed soil moisture measurements. We find that, by comparison to a nearby watershed with higher vegetation productivity and greater fire frequency, the managed wildfire regime at SCB caused relatively little change in dominant vegetation over the 47 year period and relatively little response of soil moisture. Fire occurrence was limited to drier mixed-conifer sites; fire-caused overstory tree mortality patches were generally less than 10 ha, and fires had little effect on removing mid- and lower strata trees. Few dense meadow areas were created by fire, with most forest conversion leading to sparse meadow and shrub areas, which had similar soil moisture profiles to nearby mixed-conifer vegetation. Future fires in SCB could be managed to encourage greater tree mortality adjacent to wetlands to increase soil moisture, although the potential hydrologic benefits of the program in drier basins such as this one may be limited.
引用
收藏
页码:1547 / 1565
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Distinct fungal successional trajectories following wildfire between soil horizons in a cold-temperate forest
    Yang, Teng
    Tedersoo, Leho
    Lin, Xingwu
    Fitzpatrick, Matthew C.
    Jia, Yunsheng
    Liu, Xu
    Ni, Yingying
    Shi, Yu
    Lu, Pengpeng
    Zhu, Jianguo
    Chu, Haiyan
    NEW PHYTOLOGIST, 2020, 227 (02) : 572 - 587
  • [22] Effect of severe wildfire on soil phosphorus fractions and adsorption in a cold temperate coniferous forest after 5 years
    Deng, Yating
    Zhang, Yun
    Zheng, Xinxin
    Cui, Xiaoyang
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOIL SCIENCE, 2024, 75 (02)
  • [23] Forests, fire and vegetation change impacts on Murray-Darling basin water resources
    Lane, Patrick N. J.
    Benyon, Richard G.
    Nolan, Rachael H.
    Keenan, Rod J.
    Zhang, Lu
    AUSTRALASIAN JOURNAL OF WATER RESOURCES, 2023, 27 (01): : 68 - 84
  • [24] Compositional changes in soil water and runoff water following managed burning on a UK upland blanket bog
    Clay, Gareth D.
    Worrall, Fred
    Fraser, Evan D. G.
    JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY, 2010, 380 (1-2) : 135 - 145
  • [25] Soil predictors are crucial for modelling vegetation distribution and its responses to climate change
    Oliveira, Guilherme de Castro
    Arruda, Daniel Meira
    Filho, Elpidio Inacio Fernandes
    Veloso, Gustavo Vieira
    Francelino, Marcio Rocha
    Schaefer, Carlos Ernesto Goncalves Reynaud
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2021, 780
  • [26] Water Retention Characteristics of Mineral Forest Soils in Finland: Impacts for Modeling Soil Moisture
    Launiainen, Samuli
    Kieloaho, Antti-Jussi
    Lindroos, Antti-Jussi
    Salmivaara, Aura
    Ilvesniemi, Hannu
    Heiskanen, Juha
    FORESTS, 2022, 13 (11):
  • [27] Spatial patterns of tree cover change at a dry forest margin are driven by initial conditions, water balance and wildfire
    Harris, Lucas B.
    Taylor, Alan H.
    LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY, 2021, 36 (02) : 353 - 371
  • [28] Vegetation series, curve numbers and soil water availabilities. Application to forest restoration in drylands
    Mongil, J.
    Martin, L.
    Navarro, J.
    Martinez de Azagra, A.
    FOREST SYSTEMS, 2012, 21 (01) : 53 - 63
  • [29] Change detection of storm runoff and sediment yield using hydrologic models following wildfire in a coastal redwood forest, California
    Surfleet, Christopher G.
    Dietterick, Brian
    Skaugset, Arne
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH-REVUE CANADIENNE DE RECHERCHE FORESTIERE, 2014, 44 (06): : 572 - 581
  • [30] Vegetation Type and Soil Moisture Drive Variations in Leaf Litter Decomposition Following Secondary Forest Succession
    Liu, Yulin
    Shangguan, Zhouping
    Deng, Lei
    FORESTS, 2021, 12 (09):