4.6 Article

Impacts of wildfire on the permafrost in the boreal forests of Interior Alaska

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AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2001JD000438

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forest fire; boreal forest; permafrost; frozen ground; ground temperature

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[1] The impact to the permafrost during and after wildfire was studied using 11 boreal forest fire sites including two controlled burns. Heat transfer by conduction to the permafrost was not significant during fire. Immediately following fire, ground thermal conductivity may increase 10-fold and the surface albedo can decrease by 50% depending on the extent of burning of the surficial organic soil. The thickness of the remaining organic layer strongly affects permafrost degradation and aggradation. If the organic layer thickness was not reduced during the burn, then the active layer (the layer of soil above permafrost that annually freezes and thaws) did not change after the burn in spite of the surface albedo decrease. Any significant disturbance to the surface organic layer will increase heat flow through the active layer into the permafrost. Approximately 3-5 years after severe disturbance and depending on site conditions, the active layer will increase to a thickness that does not completely refreeze the following winter. This results in formation of a talik (an unfrozen layer below the seasonally frozen soil and above the permafrost). A thawed layer (4.15 m thick) was observed at the 1983 burned site. Model studies suggest that if an organic layer of more than 7-12 cm remains following a wildfire then the thermal impact to the permafrost will be minimal in the boreal forests of Interior Alaska.

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