Mid-term effects of wildfire and salvage logging on gross and net soil nitrogen transformation rates in a Swedish boreal forest

Wildfires are natural and important disturbances of boreal forest ecosystems, and they are expected to increase in parts of the boreal zone through climate warming. There is a broad understanding of the immediate effects of fire on soil nitrogen (N) transformation rates, but less is known about thes...

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Main Authors: Ibáñez, T. S., Rütting, T., Nilsson, M-C., Wardle, David A., Gundale, M. J.
Other Authors: Asian School of the Environment
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/162692
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1626922023-02-28T16:39:58Z Mid-term effects of wildfire and salvage logging on gross and net soil nitrogen transformation rates in a Swedish boreal forest Ibáñez, T. S. Rütting, T. Nilsson, M-C. Wardle, David A. Gundale, M. J. Asian School of the Environment Engineering::Environmental engineering Boreal Forest Salvage Logging Wildfires are natural and important disturbances of boreal forest ecosystems, and they are expected to increase in parts of the boreal zone through climate warming. There is a broad understanding of the immediate effects of fire on soil nitrogen (N) transformation rates, but less is known about these effects several years after fire. In July 2014, a large wildfire in the boreal forest zone of Central Sweden took place. Four years after the wildfire, we measured processes linked to the soil N cycle using the 15N pool dilution method (for gross N mineralization, consumption and nitrification) and the buried bags method (for net N mineralization), in soils from stands of different fire severity that had or had not been subjected to salvage logging. Gross N mineralization and consumption rates per unit carbon (C) increased by 81 % and 85 % respectively, in response to high fire severity, and nitrification rates per unit C basis decreased by 69 % in response to high fire severity, while net N mineralization was unresponsive. There was no difference in the effect of salvage logging across stands of differing fire severity on N transformation rates, although concentrations of resin adsorbed nitrate (NO3–) were overall 50 % lower in logged compared to unlogged stands. We also found that irrespective of burn severity, N immobilization rates exceeded N nitrification rates, and immobilization was therefore the dominant pathway of gross N consumption. Gross N consumption rates were higher in burned than unburned stands, despite there being a higher active microbial biomass in unburned soil, which suggests an even higher immobilization of N over time as the microbial biomass recovers following fire. Our study shows that soil N transformation rates were more affected by changes in fire severity than by salvage logging, and that four years after the fire many aspects of the N cycle did not differ between burned and unburned stands, suggesting substantial resilience of the N cycle to fire and salvage logging. However, we note that long term impact and many additional ecosystem properties or processes should be evaluated before concluding that salvage logging has no ecosystem impact. Furthermore, shortened fire regimes following climate warming accompanied with shorter intervals between salvage logging practices, could still impact the capability for the N cycle to recover after an intense fire. While wildfire in the boreal region results in a shift from nutrient conserving to nutrient demanding plant species, our results suggest this shift is dependent on a relatively short-lived pulse of higher N cycling processes that would have likely dissipated within a few years after the fire. Published version This research was funded by Formas (ID 2015–8544-30572–25) and a TC4F grant to MCN. 2022-11-07T00:46:37Z 2022-11-07T00:46:37Z 2022 Journal Article Ibáñez, T. S., Rütting, T., Nilsson, M., Wardle, D. A. & Gundale, M. J. (2022). Mid-term effects of wildfire and salvage logging on gross and net soil nitrogen transformation rates in a Swedish boreal forest. Forest Ecology and Management, 517, 120240-. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2022.120240 0378-1127 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/162692 10.1016/j.foreco.2022.120240 2-s2.0-85130054633 517 120240 en Forest Ecology and Management © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Environmental engineering
Boreal Forest
Salvage Logging
spellingShingle Engineering::Environmental engineering
Boreal Forest
Salvage Logging
Ibáñez, T. S.
Rütting, T.
Nilsson, M-C.
Wardle, David A.
Gundale, M. J.
Mid-term effects of wildfire and salvage logging on gross and net soil nitrogen transformation rates in a Swedish boreal forest
description Wildfires are natural and important disturbances of boreal forest ecosystems, and they are expected to increase in parts of the boreal zone through climate warming. There is a broad understanding of the immediate effects of fire on soil nitrogen (N) transformation rates, but less is known about these effects several years after fire. In July 2014, a large wildfire in the boreal forest zone of Central Sweden took place. Four years after the wildfire, we measured processes linked to the soil N cycle using the 15N pool dilution method (for gross N mineralization, consumption and nitrification) and the buried bags method (for net N mineralization), in soils from stands of different fire severity that had or had not been subjected to salvage logging. Gross N mineralization and consumption rates per unit carbon (C) increased by 81 % and 85 % respectively, in response to high fire severity, and nitrification rates per unit C basis decreased by 69 % in response to high fire severity, while net N mineralization was unresponsive. There was no difference in the effect of salvage logging across stands of differing fire severity on N transformation rates, although concentrations of resin adsorbed nitrate (NO3–) were overall 50 % lower in logged compared to unlogged stands. We also found that irrespective of burn severity, N immobilization rates exceeded N nitrification rates, and immobilization was therefore the dominant pathway of gross N consumption. Gross N consumption rates were higher in burned than unburned stands, despite there being a higher active microbial biomass in unburned soil, which suggests an even higher immobilization of N over time as the microbial biomass recovers following fire. Our study shows that soil N transformation rates were more affected by changes in fire severity than by salvage logging, and that four years after the fire many aspects of the N cycle did not differ between burned and unburned stands, suggesting substantial resilience of the N cycle to fire and salvage logging. However, we note that long term impact and many additional ecosystem properties or processes should be evaluated before concluding that salvage logging has no ecosystem impact. Furthermore, shortened fire regimes following climate warming accompanied with shorter intervals between salvage logging practices, could still impact the capability for the N cycle to recover after an intense fire. While wildfire in the boreal region results in a shift from nutrient conserving to nutrient demanding plant species, our results suggest this shift is dependent on a relatively short-lived pulse of higher N cycling processes that would have likely dissipated within a few years after the fire.
author2 Asian School of the Environment
author_facet Asian School of the Environment
Ibáñez, T. S.
Rütting, T.
Nilsson, M-C.
Wardle, David A.
Gundale, M. J.
format Article
author Ibáñez, T. S.
Rütting, T.
Nilsson, M-C.
Wardle, David A.
Gundale, M. J.
author_sort Ibáñez, T. S.
title Mid-term effects of wildfire and salvage logging on gross and net soil nitrogen transformation rates in a Swedish boreal forest
title_short Mid-term effects of wildfire and salvage logging on gross and net soil nitrogen transformation rates in a Swedish boreal forest
title_full Mid-term effects of wildfire and salvage logging on gross and net soil nitrogen transformation rates in a Swedish boreal forest
title_fullStr Mid-term effects of wildfire and salvage logging on gross and net soil nitrogen transformation rates in a Swedish boreal forest
title_full_unstemmed Mid-term effects of wildfire and salvage logging on gross and net soil nitrogen transformation rates in a Swedish boreal forest
title_sort mid-term effects of wildfire and salvage logging on gross and net soil nitrogen transformation rates in a swedish boreal forest
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/162692
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