Wildfire and harvesting effects on carbon dynamics in an oak-pine mixed forest

CO2 emission to the atmosphere is the main cause of global warming. The impacts of land-use changes for agriculture and urbanisation, deforestation, and fire disturbance are attributed to the increase in CO2 emissions. Soil respiration, largely due to microbial activity, is one of the CO2 sources be...

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Main Authors: Kaptanoglu AS, Namli A
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Italian Society of Silviculture and Forest Ecology (SISEF) 2020-10-01
Series:iForest - Biogeosciences and Forestry
Subjects:
Online Access:https://iforest.sisef.org/contents/?id=ifor3312-013
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spelling doaj-ba2e003ef9084fba80da70ca6803e4db2020-11-25T02:30:09ZengItalian Society of Silviculture and Forest Ecology (SISEF)iForest - Biogeosciences and Forestry1971-74581971-74582020-10-0113143544010.3832/ifor3312-0133312Wildfire and harvesting effects on carbon dynamics in an oak-pine mixed forestKaptanoglu AS0Namli A1General Directorate of Forestry, Research Institute for Forest Soil and Ecology, 26160 Eskisehir (Turkey)Ankara University, Soil Science Department, Ankara (Turkey)CO2 emission to the atmosphere is the main cause of global warming. The impacts of land-use changes for agriculture and urbanisation, deforestation, and fire disturbance are attributed to the increase in CO2 emissions. Soil respiration, largely due to microbial activity, is one of the CO2 sources being released to the atmosphere. In this regard, several soil parameters related with carbon cycle, including organic matter, total N, C/N ratio, CO2 efflux, microbial biomass C (Cmic), the Cmic/Corg ratio, the metabolic quotient qCO2, and β-D glucosidase activity, were determined in a burned (harvested, H; non-harvested, NH), and its adjacent unburned (UB), mixed oak-pine forest to estimate the effects of burning and removal of residual woods. The Cmic increased gradually with burning and harvesting after Month 9, and sharp increases were observed in all areas, likely due to the abundant rainfall after Month 12. CO2 efflux decreased in the burned areas at Months 4 and 6; however, this reversed in Month 9. In spite of non-significant differences, we detected higher CO2 efflux values in the unburned areas compared to the burned ones, probably as a result of the drought effect observed in the burned areas up to Months 9 and 12 due to the increased soil heat. There was no significant difference between the H and NH burned areas, while both areas were different from the unburned areas in all soil parameters, except CO2 efflux and qCO2. The harvesting effect was not significant compared to the fire effect with regard to the considered soil variables, likely due to the management and protection of the burned area which allowed a fast vegetation recover. The abundance of the microbial biomass was independent of the changes in CO2 efflux and showed a negative correlation with β-D glucosidase activity. This might be related to the variation in substrate quality, microbial composition and abundance after burning and harvesting.https://iforest.sisef.org/contents/?id=ifor3312-013co2 evolutionβ-d glucosidase activityqco2soil microbial biomass carbonwildfire
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kaptanoglu AS
Namli A
spellingShingle Kaptanoglu AS
Namli A
Wildfire and harvesting effects on carbon dynamics in an oak-pine mixed forest
iForest - Biogeosciences and Forestry
co2 evolution
β-d glucosidase activity
qco2
soil microbial biomass carbon
wildfire
author_facet Kaptanoglu AS
Namli A
author_sort Kaptanoglu AS
title Wildfire and harvesting effects on carbon dynamics in an oak-pine mixed forest
title_short Wildfire and harvesting effects on carbon dynamics in an oak-pine mixed forest
title_full Wildfire and harvesting effects on carbon dynamics in an oak-pine mixed forest
title_fullStr Wildfire and harvesting effects on carbon dynamics in an oak-pine mixed forest
title_full_unstemmed Wildfire and harvesting effects on carbon dynamics in an oak-pine mixed forest
title_sort wildfire and harvesting effects on carbon dynamics in an oak-pine mixed forest
publisher Italian Society of Silviculture and Forest Ecology (SISEF)
series iForest - Biogeosciences and Forestry
issn 1971-7458
1971-7458
publishDate 2020-10-01
description CO2 emission to the atmosphere is the main cause of global warming. The impacts of land-use changes for agriculture and urbanisation, deforestation, and fire disturbance are attributed to the increase in CO2 emissions. Soil respiration, largely due to microbial activity, is one of the CO2 sources being released to the atmosphere. In this regard, several soil parameters related with carbon cycle, including organic matter, total N, C/N ratio, CO2 efflux, microbial biomass C (Cmic), the Cmic/Corg ratio, the metabolic quotient qCO2, and β-D glucosidase activity, were determined in a burned (harvested, H; non-harvested, NH), and its adjacent unburned (UB), mixed oak-pine forest to estimate the effects of burning and removal of residual woods. The Cmic increased gradually with burning and harvesting after Month 9, and sharp increases were observed in all areas, likely due to the abundant rainfall after Month 12. CO2 efflux decreased in the burned areas at Months 4 and 6; however, this reversed in Month 9. In spite of non-significant differences, we detected higher CO2 efflux values in the unburned areas compared to the burned ones, probably as a result of the drought effect observed in the burned areas up to Months 9 and 12 due to the increased soil heat. There was no significant difference between the H and NH burned areas, while both areas were different from the unburned areas in all soil parameters, except CO2 efflux and qCO2. The harvesting effect was not significant compared to the fire effect with regard to the considered soil variables, likely due to the management and protection of the burned area which allowed a fast vegetation recover. The abundance of the microbial biomass was independent of the changes in CO2 efflux and showed a negative correlation with β-D glucosidase activity. This might be related to the variation in substrate quality, microbial composition and abundance after burning and harvesting.
topic co2 evolution
β-d glucosidase activity
qco2
soil microbial biomass carbon
wildfire
url https://iforest.sisef.org/contents/?id=ifor3312-013
work_keys_str_mv AT kaptanogluas wildfireandharvestingeffectsoncarbondynamicsinanoakpinemixedforest
AT namlia wildfireandharvestingeffectsoncarbondynamicsinanoakpinemixedforest
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