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Fire severity as a key determinant of aboveground and belowground biological community recovery in managed even‐aged boreal forests

1. Changes in fire regime of boreal forests in response to climate warming are expected to impact postfire recovery. However, quantitative data on how managed forests sustain and recover from recent fire disturbance are limited. 2. Two years after a large wildfire in managed even‐aged boreal forests...

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Autores principales: Pérez‐Izquierdo, Leticia, Bengtsson, Jan, Clemmensen, Karina E., Granath, Gustaf, Gundale, Michael J., Ibáñez, Theresa S., Lindahl, Björn D., Strengbom, Joachim, Taylor, Astrid, Viketoft, Maria, Wardle, David A., Nilsson, Marie‐Charlotte
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10191780/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37206687
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.10086
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author Pérez‐Izquierdo, Leticia
Bengtsson, Jan
Clemmensen, Karina E.
Granath, Gustaf
Gundale, Michael J.
Ibáñez, Theresa S.
Lindahl, Björn D.
Strengbom, Joachim
Taylor, Astrid
Viketoft, Maria
Wardle, David A.
Nilsson, Marie‐Charlotte
author_facet Pérez‐Izquierdo, Leticia
Bengtsson, Jan
Clemmensen, Karina E.
Granath, Gustaf
Gundale, Michael J.
Ibáñez, Theresa S.
Lindahl, Björn D.
Strengbom, Joachim
Taylor, Astrid
Viketoft, Maria
Wardle, David A.
Nilsson, Marie‐Charlotte
author_sort Pérez‐Izquierdo, Leticia
collection PubMed
description 1. Changes in fire regime of boreal forests in response to climate warming are expected to impact postfire recovery. However, quantitative data on how managed forests sustain and recover from recent fire disturbance are limited. 2. Two years after a large wildfire in managed even‐aged boreal forests in Sweden, we investigated how recovery of aboveground and belowground communities, that is, understory vegetation and soil microbial and faunal communities, responded to variation in the severity of soil (i.e., consumption of soil organic matter) and canopy fires (i.e., tree mortality). 3. While fire overall enhanced diversity of understory vegetation through colonization of fire adapted plant species, it reduced the abundance and diversity of soil biota. We observed contrasting effects of tree‐ and soil‐related fire severity on survival and recovery of understory vegetation and soil biological communities. Severe fires that killed overstory Pinus sylvestris promoted a successional stage dominated by the mosses Ceratodon purpureus and Polytrichum juniperinum, but reduced regeneration of tree seedlings and disfavored the ericaceous dwarf‐shrub Vaccinium vitis‐idaea and the grass Deschampsia flexuosa. Moreover, high tree mortality from fire reduced fungal biomass and changed fungal community composition, in particular that of ectomycorrhizal fungi, and reduced the fungivorous soil Oribatida. In contrast, soil‐related fire severity had little impact on vegetation composition, fungal communities, and soil animals. Bacterial communities responded to both tree‐ and soil‐related fire severity. 4. Synthesis: Our results 2 years postfire suggest that a change in fire regime from a historically low‐severity ground fire regime, with fires that mainly burns into the soil organic layer, to a stand‐replacing fire regime with a high degree of tree mortality, as may be expected with climate change, is likely to impact the short‐term recovery of stand structure and above‐ and belowground species composition of even‐aged P. sylvestris boreal forests.
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spelling pubmed-101917802023-05-18 Fire severity as a key determinant of aboveground and belowground biological community recovery in managed even‐aged boreal forests Pérez‐Izquierdo, Leticia Bengtsson, Jan Clemmensen, Karina E. Granath, Gustaf Gundale, Michael J. Ibáñez, Theresa S. Lindahl, Björn D. Strengbom, Joachim Taylor, Astrid Viketoft, Maria Wardle, David A. Nilsson, Marie‐Charlotte Ecol Evol Research Articles 1. Changes in fire regime of boreal forests in response to climate warming are expected to impact postfire recovery. However, quantitative data on how managed forests sustain and recover from recent fire disturbance are limited. 2. Two years after a large wildfire in managed even‐aged boreal forests in Sweden, we investigated how recovery of aboveground and belowground communities, that is, understory vegetation and soil microbial and faunal communities, responded to variation in the severity of soil (i.e., consumption of soil organic matter) and canopy fires (i.e., tree mortality). 3. While fire overall enhanced diversity of understory vegetation through colonization of fire adapted plant species, it reduced the abundance and diversity of soil biota. We observed contrasting effects of tree‐ and soil‐related fire severity on survival and recovery of understory vegetation and soil biological communities. Severe fires that killed overstory Pinus sylvestris promoted a successional stage dominated by the mosses Ceratodon purpureus and Polytrichum juniperinum, but reduced regeneration of tree seedlings and disfavored the ericaceous dwarf‐shrub Vaccinium vitis‐idaea and the grass Deschampsia flexuosa. Moreover, high tree mortality from fire reduced fungal biomass and changed fungal community composition, in particular that of ectomycorrhizal fungi, and reduced the fungivorous soil Oribatida. In contrast, soil‐related fire severity had little impact on vegetation composition, fungal communities, and soil animals. Bacterial communities responded to both tree‐ and soil‐related fire severity. 4. Synthesis: Our results 2 years postfire suggest that a change in fire regime from a historically low‐severity ground fire regime, with fires that mainly burns into the soil organic layer, to a stand‐replacing fire regime with a high degree of tree mortality, as may be expected with climate change, is likely to impact the short‐term recovery of stand structure and above‐ and belowground species composition of even‐aged P. sylvestris boreal forests. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2023-05-17 /pmc/articles/PMC10191780/ /pubmed/37206687 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.10086 Text en © 2023 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Pérez‐Izquierdo, Leticia
Bengtsson, Jan
Clemmensen, Karina E.
Granath, Gustaf
Gundale, Michael J.
Ibáñez, Theresa S.
Lindahl, Björn D.
Strengbom, Joachim
Taylor, Astrid
Viketoft, Maria
Wardle, David A.
Nilsson, Marie‐Charlotte
Fire severity as a key determinant of aboveground and belowground biological community recovery in managed even‐aged boreal forests
title Fire severity as a key determinant of aboveground and belowground biological community recovery in managed even‐aged boreal forests
title_full Fire severity as a key determinant of aboveground and belowground biological community recovery in managed even‐aged boreal forests
title_fullStr Fire severity as a key determinant of aboveground and belowground biological community recovery in managed even‐aged boreal forests
title_full_unstemmed Fire severity as a key determinant of aboveground and belowground biological community recovery in managed even‐aged boreal forests
title_short Fire severity as a key determinant of aboveground and belowground biological community recovery in managed even‐aged boreal forests
title_sort fire severity as a key determinant of aboveground and belowground biological community recovery in managed even‐aged boreal forests
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10191780/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37206687
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.10086
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