Temporal characterisation of soil-plant natural recovery related to fire severity in burned Pinus halepensis Mill. forests

Moya, D.; González-De Vega, S.; García-Orenes, F.; Morugán-Coronado, A.; Arcenegui, V.; Mataix-Solera, J.; Lucas-Borja, M. E.; De las Heras, J.

Keywords: fire severity, ecosystem response, soil quality indicators, land management, Aleppo pine forests, Post-fire restoration

Abstract

Despite Mediterranean ecosystems' high resilience to fire, both climate and land use change, and alterations in fire regimes increase their vulnerability to fire by affecting the long-termnatural recovery of ecosystemservices. The objective of this work is to study the effects of fire severity on biochemical soil indicators, such as chemical composition or enzymatic activity, related to time after fire and natural vegetation recovery (soil-plant interphase). Soil samples fromthreewildfires occurring 3, 15 and 21 years agowere taken in the south-eastern Iberian Peninsula (semiarid climate). Sampling included three fire severity levels in naturally regenerated (and changing to shrublands) Pinus halepensis Mill. forests. In the short-term post-fire period, phosphorus concentration, electrical conductivity and urease activity were positively linked to fire severity, and also influenced β-glucosidade activity in a negative relationship. During the 15–21-year post-fire period, the effects related to medium-high fire severity were negligible and soil quality indicatorswere linked to natural regeneration success. The results showed thatmost soil properties recovered in the long term after fire (21 years). These outcomes will help managers and stakeholders to implement management tools to stabilise soils and to restore burned ecosystems affected bymedium-high fire severity. Such knowledge can be considered in adaptive forest management to reduce the negative effects of wildfires and desertification, and to improve the resilience of vulnerable ecosystems in a global change scenario.

Más información

Título de la Revista: SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volumen: 640 - 641
Editorial: Elsevier
Fecha de publicación: 2018
Página de inicio: 42
Página final: 51
Idioma: inglés
URL: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0048969718318631