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Comparing the Influence of Wildfire and Prescribed Burns on Watershed Nitrogen Biogeochemistry Using (15)N Natural Abundance in Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecosystem Components

We evaluated differences in the effects of three low-severity spring prescribed burns and four wildfires on nitrogen (N) biogeochemistry in Rocky Mountain headwater watersheds. We compared paired (burned/unburned) watersheds of four wildfires and three spring prescribed burns for three growing seaso...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Stephan, Kirsten, Kavanagh, Kathleen L., Koyama, Akihiro
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4401779/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25885257
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0119560
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author Stephan, Kirsten
Kavanagh, Kathleen L.
Koyama, Akihiro
author_facet Stephan, Kirsten
Kavanagh, Kathleen L.
Koyama, Akihiro
author_sort Stephan, Kirsten
collection PubMed
description We evaluated differences in the effects of three low-severity spring prescribed burns and four wildfires on nitrogen (N) biogeochemistry in Rocky Mountain headwater watersheds. We compared paired (burned/unburned) watersheds of four wildfires and three spring prescribed burns for three growing seasons post-fire. To better understand fire effects on the entire watershed ecosystem, we measured N concentrations and δ(15)N in both the terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems components, i.e., soil, understory plants in upland and riparian areas, streamwater, and in-stream moss. In addition, we measured nitrate reductase activity in foliage of Spiraea betulifolia, a dominant understory species. We found increases of δ(15)N and N concentrations in both terrestrial and aquatic ecosystem N pools after wildfire, but responses were limited to terrestrial N pools after prescribed burns indicating that N transfer from terrestrial to aquatic ecosystem components did not occur in low-severity prescribed burns. Foliar δ(15)N differed between wildfire and prescribed burn sites; the δ(15)N of foliage of upland plants was enriched by 2.9 ‰ (difference between burned and unburned watersheds) in the first two years after wildfire, but only 1.3 ‰ after prescribed burns. In-stream moss δ(15)N in wildfire-burned watersheds was enriched by 1.3 ‰, but there was no response by moss in prescription-burned watersheds, mirroring patterns of streamwater nitrate concentrations. S. betulifolia showed significantly higher nitrate reductase activity two years after wildfires relative to corresponding unburned watersheds, but no such difference was found after prescribed burns. These responses are consistent with less altered N biogeochemistry after prescribed burns relative to wildfire. We concluded that δ(15)N values in terrestrial and aquatic plants and streamwater nitrate concentrations after fire can be useful indicators of the magnitude and duration of fire effects and the fate of post-fire available N.
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spelling pubmed-44017792015-04-21 Comparing the Influence of Wildfire and Prescribed Burns on Watershed Nitrogen Biogeochemistry Using (15)N Natural Abundance in Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecosystem Components Stephan, Kirsten Kavanagh, Kathleen L. Koyama, Akihiro PLoS One Research Article We evaluated differences in the effects of three low-severity spring prescribed burns and four wildfires on nitrogen (N) biogeochemistry in Rocky Mountain headwater watersheds. We compared paired (burned/unburned) watersheds of four wildfires and three spring prescribed burns for three growing seasons post-fire. To better understand fire effects on the entire watershed ecosystem, we measured N concentrations and δ(15)N in both the terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems components, i.e., soil, understory plants in upland and riparian areas, streamwater, and in-stream moss. In addition, we measured nitrate reductase activity in foliage of Spiraea betulifolia, a dominant understory species. We found increases of δ(15)N and N concentrations in both terrestrial and aquatic ecosystem N pools after wildfire, but responses were limited to terrestrial N pools after prescribed burns indicating that N transfer from terrestrial to aquatic ecosystem components did not occur in low-severity prescribed burns. Foliar δ(15)N differed between wildfire and prescribed burn sites; the δ(15)N of foliage of upland plants was enriched by 2.9 ‰ (difference between burned and unburned watersheds) in the first two years after wildfire, but only 1.3 ‰ after prescribed burns. In-stream moss δ(15)N in wildfire-burned watersheds was enriched by 1.3 ‰, but there was no response by moss in prescription-burned watersheds, mirroring patterns of streamwater nitrate concentrations. S. betulifolia showed significantly higher nitrate reductase activity two years after wildfires relative to corresponding unburned watersheds, but no such difference was found after prescribed burns. These responses are consistent with less altered N biogeochemistry after prescribed burns relative to wildfire. We concluded that δ(15)N values in terrestrial and aquatic plants and streamwater nitrate concentrations after fire can be useful indicators of the magnitude and duration of fire effects and the fate of post-fire available N. Public Library of Science 2015-04-17 /pmc/articles/PMC4401779/ /pubmed/25885257 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0119560 Text en © 2015 Stephan et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Stephan, Kirsten
Kavanagh, Kathleen L.
Koyama, Akihiro
Comparing the Influence of Wildfire and Prescribed Burns on Watershed Nitrogen Biogeochemistry Using (15)N Natural Abundance in Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecosystem Components
title Comparing the Influence of Wildfire and Prescribed Burns on Watershed Nitrogen Biogeochemistry Using (15)N Natural Abundance in Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecosystem Components
title_full Comparing the Influence of Wildfire and Prescribed Burns on Watershed Nitrogen Biogeochemistry Using (15)N Natural Abundance in Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecosystem Components
title_fullStr Comparing the Influence of Wildfire and Prescribed Burns on Watershed Nitrogen Biogeochemistry Using (15)N Natural Abundance in Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecosystem Components
title_full_unstemmed Comparing the Influence of Wildfire and Prescribed Burns on Watershed Nitrogen Biogeochemistry Using (15)N Natural Abundance in Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecosystem Components
title_short Comparing the Influence of Wildfire and Prescribed Burns on Watershed Nitrogen Biogeochemistry Using (15)N Natural Abundance in Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecosystem Components
title_sort comparing the influence of wildfire and prescribed burns on watershed nitrogen biogeochemistry using (15)n natural abundance in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystem components
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4401779/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25885257
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0119560
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