Abstract

The effects of high intensity fire on the cycling of nutrients in litter and canopy through fall were studied in pole stand jarrah (E. marginata Bonn ex Sm.) forest near Dwellingup, south-western Australia. In the first year following burning, twice as much litter fell on the burnt site as on an unburnt control site. Concentrations of phosphorus and nitrogen were higher in post-fire litter probably because crown scorch during burning prevented withdrawal of phosphorus and nitrogen into the tree before leaf fall. This, together with the increased weight of litter, resulted in a four-fold increase in the accession of phosphorus and nitrogen to the forest floor in litter one year after the fire on the burnt site. The concentrations of potassium, magnesium, sodium and chlorine in the litter were all significantly lower on the burnt site than on the unburnt site in the first year following burning. During the second year after the fire, significantly less litter fell on the burnt area than on the unburnt control site. Phosphorus concentrations in the litter from the burnt site remained 50% higher than in litter from the control but the other nutrient elements returned to their pre-fire levels. There are indications that more phosphorus and potassium are cycled via canopy leaching immediately after burning. In the second winter following the fire there were no significant differences in the amounts of nutrients in canopy leachate on the burnt and unburnt areas.

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