Abstract

Slash and burn practices are widely used around the globe with different degrees of success which are mostly related to the impact of fire on soil properties. In Japan slash and burn practises, known as Yakihata, have a long history and are still used in Yamagata Prefecture today. The purpose of this study was to determine the impact of a low severity controlled fire underneath Japanese cedar (Cryptomeria japonica) on brown forest soil (Cambisol). Japanese Cedar is the dominant species among plantations in Japan. We measured organic carbon and nitrogen content as well as changes in carbon (δ13C) and nitrogen (δ15N) stable isotope composition in a steep west facing slope under heavy precipitation (~2600 mm/a) and heavy snowfall (~3 to 4 m/a). The accumulation of Ctotal and Ntotal at the bottom of the slopes was remarkably higher at the slash and burned site than in the control forest site. After slash and burn δ15N isotopes in the slope in general became significantly lighter than in the control forest while the δ13C did not show any significant difference between the two sites except at the bottom of the slopes where δ13C was heavier in the forest. The results show that Ctotal and Ntotal values as well as the isotopes ratios of C and N change with decreasing elevation in the forest as well as in the burned site being consistent with leaching and erosion. The changes in soil nitrogen and carbon isotopes at the bottom of the slope appear to be related to the transport of material with different isotopic composition from the upper slope. The effect of the low severity fire (as part of the slash and burn practice) on soil organic carbon and nitrogen movement was enhanced by the steepness of the slopes and the high precipitation of Shonai region.

Highlights

  • Japan consists of 73% rugged and mountainous areas which are not suitable for settlement or agriculture and covered by forest (Sasse, 1998; Pohl, 1986)

  • The results show that Ctotal and Ntotal values as well as the isotopes ratios of C and N change with decreasing elevation in the forest as well as in the burned site being consistent with leaching and erosion

  • The effect of the low severity fire on soil organic carbon and nitrogen movement was enhanced by the steepness of the slopes and the high precipitation of Shonai region

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Summary

Introduction

Japan consists of 73% rugged and mountainous areas which are not suitable for settlement or agriculture and covered by forest (Sasse, 1998; Pohl, 1986). Steep slopes with more than 15 ̊ inclination form 48% of the country’s land mass and slopes with an inclination of more than 8 ̊, 71% (Pohl, 1986). Mountain forests always played an important role in the Japanese civilization, providing the people with food, fuel, building materials, fertilizer and fodder for husbandry in the less steep areas. Nowadays there are more than 10 million hectares (30% of the total land area) of plantations in Japan, with 44%. The Japanese Yakihata is a small scale controlled fire of low severity and intensity that takes place in cedar plantations in a mountainous environment.

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