AI Article Synopsis

  • Fire plays a crucial role in global carbon and nitrogen cycling, significantly affecting both direct losses during combustion and postfire nitrogen losses, which are less understood.
  • The study measured direct carbon and nitrogen losses during a high-intensity fire in central Spain, finding that combustion resulted in losses of 9.4 Mg C/ha and 129 kg N/ha, with fire drastically increasing soil mineral nitrogen concentrations over time.
  • Postfire emissions of nitrogen gases and leaching losses were also examined, revealing that 33% of the nitrogen formed was retained in stable soil pools, while a substantial portion escaped, highlighting the importance of considering these losses in future assessments of fire impacts on ecosystems.

Article Abstract

Fire is a major factor controlling global carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) cycling. While direct C and N losses caused by combustion have been comparably well established, important knowledge gaps remain on postfire N losses. Here, we quantified both direct C and N combustion losses as well as postfire gaseous losses (N O, NO and N ) and N leaching after a high-intensity experimental fire in an old shrubland in central Spain. Combustion losses of C and N were 9.4 Mg C/ha and 129 kg N/ha, respectively, representing 66% and 58% of initial aboveground vegetation and litter stocks. Moreover, fire strongly increased soil mineral N concentrations by several magnitudes to a maximum of 44 kg N/ha 2 months after the fire, with N largely originating from dead soil microbes. Postfire soil emissions increased from 5.4 to 10.1 kg N ha  year for N , from 1.1 to 1.9 kg N ha  year for NO and from 0.05 to 0.2 kg N ha  year for N O. Maximal leaching losses occurred 2 months after peak soil mineral N concentrations, but remained with 0.1 kg N ha  year of minor importance for the postfire N mass balance. N stable isotope labelling revealed that 33% of the mineral N produced by fire was incorporated in stable soil N pools, while the remainder was lost. Overall, our work reveals significant postfire N losses dominated by emissions of N that need to be considered when assessing fire effects on ecosystem N cycling and mass balance. We propose indirect N gas emissions factors for the first postfire year, equalling to 7.7% (N -N), 2.7% (NO-N) and 5.0% (N O-N) of the direct fire combustion losses of the respective N gas species.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gcb.14388DOI Listing

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