Abstract

Fire in boreal ecosystems is known to affect CO2 efflux from forest soils, which is commonly termed soil respiration (Rs). However, there is limited information on how fire and recovery from this disturbance affects spatial variation in Rs. The main objective of this study was to quantify the spatial variability of Rs over the growing season in a boreal aspen (Populus tremuloides Michx.) fire chronosequence. The chronosequence included three stands in northern Alberta; a post fire stand (1 year old, PF), a stand at canopy closure (9 years old, CC), and a mature stand (72 years old, MA). Soil respiration, temperature and moisture were measured monthly from May to August using an intensive spatial sampling protocol (n = 42, minimum lag = 2 m). Key aboveground and belowground properties were measured one time at each sampling point. No spatial structure was detected in Rs of the PF stand during the peak growing season (June and July), whereas Rs was auto-correlated at a scale of < 6 m in the CC and MA stands. The PF stand had the lowest mean Rs (4.60 μmol C m-2 s-1) followed by the CC (5.41 μmol C m-2 s-1), and the MA (7.32 μmol C m-2 s-1) stand. Forest floor depth was the only aboveground factor that influenced the spatial pattern of Rs in all three stands and was strongest in the PF stand. Enzyme activity and fine root biomass, on the other hand, were the significant belowground factors driving the spatial pattern of Rs in the CC and MA stands. Persistent joint aboveground and belowground control on Rs in the CC and MA stands indicates a tight spatial coupling, which was not observed in the PF stand. Overall, the current study suggests that fire in the boreal aspen ecosystem alters the spatial structure of Rs and that fine scale heterogeneity develops quickly as stands reach the canopy closure phase (<10 years).

Highlights

  • Lowest early summer (May) Rs was found in the canopy closure (CC) stand whereas lowest late summer (June–August) Rs was in the post fire (PF) stand (Table 1)

  • The lower Rs in July in the PF stand can be attributed to the decrease in autotrophic respiration due to the premature defoliation of aspen seedlings in July caused by ink spot disease, a common feature in young aspen stands regenerating from suckers [76]

  • Studies on post-fire spatial heterogeneity in Rs in boreal ecosystems are few despite its importance in modeling and predicting future net C exchange

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Summary

Objectives

The main objective of this study was to quantify the spatial variability of Rs over the growing season in a boreal aspen (Populus tremuloides Michx.) fire chronosequence. The specific objectives of this study were: i) to quantify the spatial variation in Rs along a chronosequence of stand development, iii) to characterize the seasonal pattern of spatial variation in Rs, and iii) to determine the principal factors controlling the spatial variation in Rs

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