Effects of wildfire and permafrost on soil organic matter and soil climate in interior Alaska

被引:120
作者
Harden, Jennifer W.
Manies, Kristen L.
Turetsky, Merritt R.
Neff, Jason C.
机构
[1] US Geol Survey, Menlo Pk, CA 94025 USA
[2] Michigan State Univ, Dept Plant Biol, E Lansing, MI 48824 USA
[3] Univ Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309 USA
关键词
black spruce; boreal; carbon; combustion; fire emission; fire; fractal analysis; ground fuel; moss cover; organic mat; organic soil; peat; permafrost; soil; surface temperature;
D O I
10.1111/j.1365-2486.2006.01255.x
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
The influence of discontinuous permafrost on ground-fuel storage, combustion losses, and postfire soil climates was examined after a wildfire near Delta Junction, AK in July 1999. At this site, we sampled soils from a four-way site comparison of burning (burned and unburned) and permafrost (permafrost and nonpermafrost). Soil organic layers (which comprise ground-fuel storage) were thicker in permafrost than nonpermafrost soils both in burned and unburned sites. While we expected fire severity to be greater in the drier site (without permafrost), combustion losses were not significantly different between the two burned sites. Overall, permafrost and burning had significant effects on physical soil variables. Most notably, unburned permafrost sites with the thickest organic mats consistently had the coldest temperatures and wettest mineral soil, while soils in the burned nonpermafrost sites were warmer and drier than the other soils. For every centimeter of organic mat thickness, temperature at 5 cm depth was about 0.5 degrees C cooler during summer months. We propose that organic soil layers determine to a large extent the physical and thermal setting for variations in vegetation, decomposition, and carbon balance across these landscapes. In particular, the deep organic layers maintain the legacies of thermal and nutrient cycling governed by fire and revegetation. We further propose that the thermal influence of deep organic soil layers may be an underlying mechanism responsible for large regional patterns of burning and regrowth, detected in fractal analyses of burn frequency and area. Thus, fractal geometry can potentially be used to analyze changes in state of these fire prone systems.
引用
收藏
页码:2391 / 2403
页数:13
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