Abstract

Prescribed fire – the intentional use of fire to help achieve a land management goal – is becoming increasingly common as a land management practice. Soil physical, chemical, and biological properties can be affected by prescribed fires, but depend on the fire, soil type, residence time and frequency, and may not be changed substantially in low-severity burns. Here, we examined soil bacterial community composition immediately post-fire (15 days) in a sandy jack pine barrens soil in Wisconsin, USA. Soil bacterial communities clustered significantly by sample site (p < 0.001) and by soil horizon (p = 0.048), but not by whether or not soil samples were visibly burned. There were also no significant differences in total relative abundance at the phylum level in visibly burned vs. not visibly burned soils, and only two significant differences in abundance or variability of individual taxa. Soil properties remained unchanged post-fire and the fire was visibly patchy, suggesting that the low severity prescribed fire most likely had a minimal soil heating effect. Therefore, we suggest the minimal bacterial community composition shifts seen in this study were likely mediated more by plants than by direct heat-killing or changes to soil properties.

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