Short-term wildfire effects on the spatial pattern and scale of labile organic-N and inorganic-N and P pools
Fecha
2009Resumen
The spatial heterogeneity of essential plant resources plays a crucial role in the structure, composition
and productivity of many terrestrial ecosystems. Fires may affect both the availability and spatial pattern
of soil nutrients. However, little is known about the effect of fire on the spatial pattern of soil resources.
We hypothesized that shortly after a wildfire, the spatial patterns of soil mineral-N, organic labile-N
(microbial biomass-N and dissolved organic-N) and extractable-P pools would become more clumped
because of ash accumulation and post-fire deposition of litter around individual adult trees. To test this
hypothesis, we used plots within a Pinus canariensis forest (with both Pinus canariensis and Adenocarpus
viscosus present) and sampled them onemonth before and one month after a wildfire. Using geostatistical
analyses, we examined the spatial patterns of soil mineral-N (NH4-N and NO3-N), dissolved organic-N
(DON), microbial biomass-N (MB-N) and soil extractable-P (PO4-P). Burned plots of P. canariensis and A.
viscosus both had values that were significantly greater than the unburned plots for all variables, except
for DON in both cases, and the N:P ratio in the case of A. viscosus, which showed significantly lower values.
Except for DON, we observed an increased spatial dependence and range after a fire for all studied
variables in the P. canariensis plots (large individuals). However, in plots with A. viscosus (smaller
individuals), we only found differences before and after the fire for the PO4-P and DON spatial patterns.
Our results confirm the changes in the spatial structure of soil variables with fire, and suggest that, on a
short-term basis, the physical structure of the plant community may determine the new spatial structure
after fire, with a more clumped distribution around large surviving trees and shrubs. The spatial patch
size of limiting resources has important consequences for the success of restoration of forest
communities on burned areas.