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Influences of forest fires on the permafrost environment: A review

Journal

ADVANCES IN CLIMATE CHANGE RESEARCH
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages 48-65

Publisher

SCIENCE PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.accre.2021.01.001

Keywords

Forest fires; Hydrothermal processes; Organic layer thickness; Active layer thickness; Ecological thresholds; Permafrost degradation; Boreal and arctic regions

Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of China Program [41871052]
  2. Startup Research Funding of Northeast Forest University for Chengdong Leadership [LJ2020-01]
  3. Outstanding Young Scholar [YQ2020-10]
  4. Joint Key Program of National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC)-Heilongjiang Province Joint Foundation for Regional Development [U20A2082]

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Forest fires in boreal and arctic regions have significant impacts on permafrost degradation, soil carbon loss, vegetation changes, and hazardous periglacial landforms. The effects of forest fires on soil temperature, active layer thickness, and nutrient release can persist for decades or even centuries, with changes in vegetation and permafrost dynamics. More research is needed to understand the complex interactions among forest fires, vegetation, carbon cycling, and permafrost under a changing climate.
In boreal and arctic regions, forest fires exert great influences on biogeochemical processes, hydrothermal dynamics of the active layer and near-surface permafrost, and subsequent nutrient cycles. In this article, the studies on impacts of forest fires on the permafrost environment are reviewed. These studies indicate that forest fires could result in an irreversible degradation of permafrost, successions of boreal forests, rapid losses of soil carbon stock, and increased hazardous periglacial landforms. After forest fires, soil temperatures rise; active layer thickens; the release of soil carbon and nitrogen enhances, and; vegetation changes from coniferous forests to broad-leaved forests, shrublands or grasslands. It may take decades or even centuries for the fire-disturbed ecosystems and permafrost environment to return to pre-fire conditions, if ever possible. In boreal forest, the thickness of organic layer has a key influence on changes in permafrost and vegetation. In addition, climate warming, change of vegetation, shortening of fire return intervals, and extent of fire range and increasing of fire severity may all modify the change trajectory of the fire-impacted permafrost environment. However, the observations and research on the relationships and interactive mechanisms among the forest fires, vegetation, carbon cycle and permafrost under a changing climate are still inadequate for a systematic impact evaluation. Using the chronosequence approach of evaluating the temporal changes by measuring changes in the permafrost environment at different stages at various sites (possibly representing varied stages of permafrost degradation and modes), multi-source data assimilation and model predictions and simulations should be integrated with the results from long- and short-term field investigations, geophysical investigations and airborne surveys, laboratory testing and remote sensing. Future studies may enable quantitatively assess and predict the feed-back relationship and influence mechanism among organic layer, permafrost and active layer processes, vegetation and soil carbon under a warming climate at desired spatial and temporal scales. The irreversible changes in the boreal and artic forest ecosystem and their ecological and hydrothermal thresholds, such as those induced by forest fires, should be better and systematically studied.

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