Abstract

Surface fuel removal is crucial to facilitate the mitigation of severe fires in forests. Prescribed burning is often used by forest managers, thanks to its low cost and high efficiency in hard-to-reach areas. The determination of heat transfer between fires and trees has rarely been carried out on living species and consequently, their long-term effects on tree physiology are still not fully understood. In this study, a multidisciplinary approach was conducted to evaluate the impact of a late spring (June) prescribed burning on a Mediterranean pine forest (Pinus nigra subsp. laricio). The surface fuels consisted of a 656 g m−² needle litter, mixed with a few scattered living herbaceous strata. During the fire spread, measurements of the inner and outer trunk temperatures were made at the base of 12 trees with an average bark thickness of 19.4 ± 7.0 mm. The fireline intensity and flame residence time were in the range of 110–160 kW m−1 and 220–468 s, respectively. Despite a maximum heating rate at the cambial area of 4.37 °C min−1, the temperature of these tissues remained below 60 °C, a critical threshold above which thermal damage will occur. In addition, prior- and post-fire physiological monitoring was performed over a long time period (2.5 years) on 24 trees, using sap flow, chlorophyll fluorescence and gas exchange measurements. All parameters remain highly correlated and indicate that the burned trees did not suffer physiological damage. Moreover, drought resistance strategies were not altered by the prescribed burning. The thermal insulation capability of the bark allowed the functional tissues to experience low heat stress that did not affect tree vitality.

Highlights

  • Accepted: 6 July 2021Wildfires represent a significant source of disturbance in Mediterranean ecosystems, impacting both economic and social activities [1]

  • The present study aims to investigate if a prescribed burning, realized beyond the limits recognized by forest agents, in terms of season, is capable of sufficiently disrupting the functioning of the trees to threaten their survival

  • The study was carried out in a natural pure stand of Pinus laricio located in Corsica, France (42◦ 110 48.500 N, 9◦ 050 39.600 E) at 1200 m above sea level

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Summary

Introduction

Wildfires represent a significant source of disturbance in Mediterranean ecosystems, impacting both economic and social activities [1]. After nearly a century of fire exclusion across forest ecosystems and the reduction of agricultural practices, surface and canopy fuels have accumulated. The horizontal and vertical continuity of fuels in the landscape has triggered large and high-severity fires [2,3]. Pines, playing a prominent role in Mediterranean forests due to their widespread distribution, are affected by wildfires. They account for a large proportion (>2/3) of the total burned areas [1,2]

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