Saturday, April 20, 2013

Fire and soil moisture


Fire is an integral part of ecosystems especially grasslands and savannas. Many of these ecosystems burn regularly. And shutting off fire radically alters their dynamics.

Some of fires impacts on ecosystems are direct. Fire directly removes biomass and kills some plants.

But the impacts on other factors, like soil moisture, are relatively indirect. Fire evaporates some water directly, but its influence on soil moisture occurs by impacting community composition, litter layers, or nutrient availability.

For example, the removal of litter layers by fire can either lead to net increases or decreases in soil moisture. On the one hand, litter layers decrease evaporation and transpiration, but they also intercept precipitation from reaching the soil.

Fires also differentially impact woody species. And woody species aren't suppressed by litter layers and   can tap deeper water stores.

At Konza, Jesse Nippert and I went through 28 years of soil moisture data from an annually burned watershed and another that had prescribed fire shut off (except one wildfire in 1991).

Examining biweekly soil moisture over 28 years is pretty amazing. I'm not sure there is a long-term dataset like this anywhere in the world.

What happens to soil moisture when you shut off fire for 27 of the 28 years? Do the soils get wetter or drier? Do plants become more water stressed or less?

Turns out it depends on how long after fire gets shut off.

Overlay of woody species cover (open circles) and the difference in soil moisture between an infrequently (20b) and annually burned (1d) watershed. Soil moisture data presented for all depths from 25 to 150 cm. Piecewise linear regression used to generate pattern of soil moisture at all depths over time. Note what happened in 1991. Soils got a lot drier in the watershed that had been unburned, even drier than the annually burned watershed, as productivity exploded. 
In the short-term, litter from the dead grasses accumulates and soil moisture is less depleted most likely due to reduced evaporation and transpiration.

But in the long-term, wood species move in and they start to draw down soil moisture levels. Especially in the deeper soil profiles.

So, in the end, shutting off fire keeps soils wetter in the short-term, but dries soils long-term. 


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