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Forest Ecology and Management
Volume 255, Issue 7, 20 April 2008, Pages 2555-2565
Large-scale experimentation and oak regeneration
 
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doi:10.1016/j.foreco.2008.01.016    How to Cite or Link Using DOI (Opens New Window)
Copyright © 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Soil organic matter in a ponderosa pine forest with varying seasons and intervals of prescribed burn

J.A. Hattena, Corresponding Author Contact Information, E-mail The Corresponding Author, D. Zabowskib, A. Ogdenb and W. Thiesc

aOregon State University, College of Oceanic and Atmospheric Sciences, 104 COAS Admin Building, Corvallis, OR 97331, USA bUniversity of Washington, College of Forest Resources, Box 352100, Seattle, WA 98195-2100, USA cUSDA Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station, Forestry Sciences Laboratory, 3200 Jefferson Way, Corvallis, OR 97331, USA

Received 25 July 2007; 
revised 8 January 2008; 
accepted 8 January 2008. 
Available online 4 March 2008.

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Abstract

Prescribed burning is used to reduce fuel loads and return ponderosa pine forests of the Western U.S. to their historical structure and function. The impact of prescribed burning on soil is dependent on fire severity which is largely managed by burning in the fall or the spring; frequency of fire will also regulate long-term fire impacts. The objective of this study was to determine if soils and soil organic matter (SOM) were affected by prescribed burning in the fall or the spring using singular or multiple prescribed burns. Prescribed burning was initiated in the spring of 1997 and fall of 1997 at 5-year intervals and once during a 15-year period on a study site located within the Malheur National Forest of the southern Blue Mountains of eastern Oregon. Soils were sampled by major genetic horizon in 2004. The 5-year interval plots had burned twice with 1–2 years of recovery while the 15-year interval plots had burned only once with 6–7 years of recovery. Samples were analyzed for pH, carbon (C), nitrogen (N), C/N ratio, cation exchange capacity, base saturation, water repellency, and humic substance composition by alkali extraction. Fall burning decreased C and N capital of the soil (O horizon +30 cm depth mineral soil) by 22–25%. Prescribed burning did not have an effect on fulvic or humic acid C concentration (FA and HA, respectively) of the mineral soil and only a minor effect on FA and HA concentration of the O horizon. One or two fall burns decreased humin and the alkali non-soluble C (NS) content of O horizon by 15 and 30%, respectively. Initiating fall burning in fire-suppressed stands may not preserve soil C, N, humin, and NS content, but may replicate the natural fire regime. Spring burning using a return interval of 5 or more years reduces the fuel load while having little impact on soil C, N, and SOM composition and may be used to prepare a site for subsequent fall burns.

Keywords: Forest soil; Pinus ponderosa; Prescribed burning; Carbon; Nitrogen; Humic acid; Fulvic acid; Humin; Blue Mountains

Article Outline

1. Introduction
2. Materials and methods
2.1. Site characteristics
2.2. Experimental design and treatment description
2.3. Soil sampling
2.4. Soil analysis
2.5. Black carbon
2.6. Statistical analysis
3. Results
3.1. Site and soil characteristics
3.2. Soil organic matter characteristics
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Acknowledgements
References


Forest Ecology and Management
Volume 255, Issue 7, 20 April 2008, Pages 2555-2565
Large-scale experimentation and oak regeneration
 
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