150 likes | 315 Views
Can Clearcutting Replace Stand-Replacing Fire?. Impacts on soil characteristics over time and future management implications. GEOG 5401 Soils Geography Fall 2007 – Univ of Colorado, Boulder. Kerry Malm. Why clearcut instead of letting it burn?. Timber harvesting Emulation silviculture
E N D
Can Clearcutting Replace Stand-Replacing Fire? Impacts on soil characteristics over time and future management implications GEOG 5401 Soils Geography Fall 2007 – Univ of Colorado, Boulder Kerry Malm
Why clearcut instead of letting it burn? • Timber harvesting • Emulation silviculture • More money • Better for the soil? • OM for decomposition • Nitrogen and Carbon availability • Faster regeneration • Fire is detrimental • High costs to put out • Volatilization of compounds • Impenetrable layers
Increase in pH Temperature rise Reduced SOM NO and NH4+ losses to atm ~10% total N of some sites N deposition from ppt Short term increase in ammonium Increased nitrate, returns to normal ~10-12 yrs Loss of microbial populations Wildfire vs. Clearcutting:Impacts on Soil WILDFIRE CLEARCUTTING • Increased soil temperature • Increased soil compaction • Churning of soils • Less reduction in SOM • Decreased soil porosity • Increased rate of mineralization
Why care about nitrogen? • Important for growth and development • Amino acids • Proteins • Enzymes • Commonly limits growth of many forest trees, like lodgepole and jack pines • Wildfire can cause N to go back into atm • No longer available to plants • Acid rain, air pollution, respiration issues
Effects of Clearcutting (Adapted from Giardina and Rhoades 2001)
Benefits of Clearcutting • Boreal soils – 12 year old clearcuts increased inorganic-N production vs. more recently cut and uncut stands (Hazlett et al. 2007)
X Burned Clear cut Mature Net Nitrification • Net nitrification highest in clearcut • Downsides? • Leaching • Water quality • Nutrient loss Pulse in nitrification (LeDuc and Rothstein 2007)
X Burned Clear cut Mature N Mineralization Pulse in mineralization • Net N Mineralized was the highest in mature stands, but higher in clearcut than burned, which is consistent with other studies (LeDuc and Rothstein 2007)
So, what are you getting at? • Both cutting and fire produce short-lived pulses of increased N • Significantly lower total N, labile N, and nitrification in wildfire soils vs. clearcut • Vegetation community repercussions • Ecosystem functioning • Biodiversity (McRae et al. 2001, Hazlett et al. 2007, Yermakov and Rothstein 2007)
Potential Issues • Different methodologies between studies • Incubated soils vs. on site measurements • Different horizons • Fire variation • Severity • Extent • Return interval/ frequency • Location: Slope, aspect, orientation • Time since disturbance is important to realize • Need long term studies (>4 yrs)
Can Timber Harvesting Replace Fire in Fire Dependent Ecosystems? • Clearcutting does not REPLACE fire, but it may work with fire • Too many other aspects to fire that harvesting doesn’t mimic well • Clearcutting can be beneficial when economic value is considered • Clearcutting is not as detrimental as one might believe
Just to note: • Timber harvesting and ecosystem restoration are potentially compatible ideas • Understanding soil processes for specific sites is extremely important to accomplish management goals • Emulation silviculture is a balance between ecology, economics, and social values (Simmard et al. 2001, McRae et al. 2001)
Works Cited • Giardina, C.P. and C.C. Rhoades. 2001. Clear cutting and burning affect nitrogen supply, phosphorous fractions and seedling growth in soils from a Wyoming lodgepole pine forest. Forest Ecology and Management 140:19-28. • Hazlett, P.W., A.M. Gordon, R.P. Voroney, and P.K. Sibley. 2007. Impact of harvesting and logging slash on nitrogen and carbon dynamics in soils from upland spruce forests in northeastern Ontario. Soil Biology & Biochemistry 39:43-57. • McRae, D.J., L.C. Duchesne, B. Freedman, T.J. Lynham, and S. Woodley. 2001. Comparisons between wildfire and forest harvesting and their implications in forest management. Environemntal Review 9:223-260. • LeDuc, S.D. and D.E. Rothstein. 2007. Initial recovery of soil carbon and nitrogen pools and dynamics following disturbance in jack pine forests: a comparison of wildfire and clearcut harvesting. Soil Biology & Biochemistry 39:2865-2876. • Simmard, D.G., J.W. Fyles, D. Pare, and T. Nguyen. 2001. Impacts of clearcut harvesting and wildifre on soil nutrients in the Quebec boreal forest. Canadian Journal of Soil Science 81:229-237. • Yermakov, Z. and D.E. Rothstein. 2006. Changes in soil carbon and nitrogen cycling along a 72-year wildfire chronosequence in Michigan jack pine forests. Oecologica 149:690-700.