Changes in net N mineralization rates and soil N and P pools in a pine forest wildfire chronosequence
Date
2009Abstract
The concern that climate change may increase
fire frequency and intensity has recently heightened the
interest in the effects of wildfires on ecosystem functioning.
Although short-term fire effects on forest soils are well
known, less information can be found on the long-term
effects of wildfires on soil fertility. Our objective was to
study the 17-year effect of wildfires on forest net
mineralization rates and extractable inorganic nitrogen (N)
and phosphorus (P) concentrations. We hypothesize that (1)
burned forest stands should exhibit lower net mineralization
rates than unburned ones; (2) these differences would be
greatest during the growing season; (3) differences between
soil variables might also be observed among plots from
different years since the last fire; and (4) due to fireresistant
geochemical processes controlling P availability,
this nutrient should recover faster than N. We used a
wildfire chronosequence of natural and unmanaged Pinus
canariensis forests in La Palma Island (Canary Islands).
Soil samples were collected during winter and spring at 22
burned and unburned plots. We found significantly higher
values for net N mineralization and extractable N pools in
unburned plots. These differences were higher for the
winter sampling date than for the spring sampling date.
Unlike extractable N and N mineralization rates, extractable
P levels of burned plots exhibited a gradual recovery over
time after an initial decrease. These results demonstrate that
P. canariensis forest soils showed low resilience after
wildfires, especially for N, and that this disturbance might
induce long-term changes in ecosystem functioning.