4.7 Article

Impacts of wildfire and landscape factors on organic soil properties in Arctic tussock tundra

期刊

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
卷 16, 期 8, 页码 -

出版社

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/ac1192

关键词

Arctic tussock tundra; wildfire; soil organic layer thickness; soil moisture; soil temperature

资金

  1. NASA Terrestrial Ecology program [NNX15AT79A]

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Tundra ecosystems contain high soil organic carbon levels, with wildfires impacting soil properties and ecosystem functioning. Short-lived tundra fires may not significantly consume organic soil layers, leading to potential overestimations of soil organic carbon stock and fire impacts. Repeated fires could result in greater loss of soil organic carbon, with soil moisture and temperature affected by wildfire in tussock tundra over decades.
Tundra ecosystems contain some of the largest stores of soil organic carbon among all biomes worldwide. Wildfire, the primary disturbance agent in Arctic tundra, is likely to impact soil properties in ways that enable carbon release and modify ecosystem functioning more broadly through impacts on organic soils, based on evidence from a recent extreme Anaktuvuk River Fire (ARF). However, comparatively little is known about the long-term impacts of typical tundra fires that are short-lived and transient. Here we quantitatively investigated how these transient tundra fires and other landscape factors affected organic soil properties, including soil organic layer (SOL) thickness, soil temperature, and soil moisture, in the tussock tundra. We examined extensive field observations collected from nearly 200 plots across a wide range of fire-impacted tundra regions in AK within the scope of NASA's Arctic Boreal Vulnerability Experiment. We found an overall shallower SOL in our field regions (similar to 15 cm on average) compared to areas with no known fire record or the ARF (similar to 20 cm or thicker), suggesting that estimations based on evidence from the extreme ARF event could result in gross overestimation of soil organic carbon (SOC) stock and fire impacts across the tundra. Typical tundra fires could be too short-lived to result in substantial SOL consumption and yield less robust results of SOL and carbon storage. Yet, repeated fires may amount to a larger amount of SOC loss than one single severe burning. As expected, our study showed that wildfire could affect soil moisture and temperature in the tussock tundra over decades after the fire, with drier and warmer soils found to be associated with more frequent and severe burnings. Soil temperature was also associated with vegetation cover and air temperature.

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