Arid Lands Newsletter (link)No. 54, November/December 2003
Fire Ecology I

Fire recurrence thresholds and desertification in Mediterranean semiarid shrublands: the role of soil nutrient capital depletion

by María del Carmen COBO and José Antonio CARREIRA

"Our study provides solid results to interpret the most important processes involved in the mid- to long-term evolution of litter and soil nutrient contents and pools in Mediterranean shrubland ecosystems in relation to changes in attributes of the fire perturbation regime (frequency and time elapsed since the last fire), which underlie desertification processes in fire-prone, semiarid areas."



Introduction

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Most studies dealing with the effects of fire have traditionally considered short-term changes after a single disturbance event. In recent years, attention has been paid to overall effects of different fire regimes (season of burn, fire severity, frequency) on ecosystem structure and function (Neary et al. 1999; de Groot et al. 2003; Wei, Kimmins and Zhou 2003), including biogeochemical process-rates (Rundel 1983; Wright and Hart 1997). Repeated wild or prescribed burning have long-term and outstanding consequences for plant productivity, resources and successional development, nowadays unknown for the great majority of ecosystems (Tiedemann, Klemmedson and Bull 2000; Meyer and Pierce 2003). Up to now, especially in the shrublands of the Mediterranean basin, few studies have considered a sampling interval longer than a few years or have taken simultaneous measurements in several sites varying only in their past fire regime. We have studied long-lasting effects of different fire disturbance regimes (in terms of "fire frequency" and "time elapsed since the last fire") in sites representative of shrubland communities from the semi-arid southeastern part of the Iberian Peninsula, that develop on steep, dolomitic, sandy, poor soils. Due to this singular combination of soil-forming factors, these shrublands were assumed to be very sensitive to changes in the fire disturbance regime (Scarascia-Mugnozza et al. 2000). We selected them as suitable experimental models to test the mechanisms that, following land-use changes during the 1960s and increased fire frequency thereafter (Naveh 1989), led to widespread desertification in the area (Carreira 1992).

Conceptual framework

Link to Cobo & Carreira Fig. 1
Link to Fig. 1, ~28K

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Following a fire event, inflammability increases with successional time in Mediterranean-type shrubland ecosystems, due to the progressive accumulation of biomass, dead plant mass and litter. Eventually, these shrublands reach a senescence stage at which it is very likely that a new wildfire takes place (Hanes 1971). During the fire, the total nutrient capital of the ecosystem, and especially N (Johnson et al. 1998), decreases due to volatilization and convective losses (Blank, Abraham and Young 1994). Following the fire, hydrological losses (runoff and erosion) may further deplete the total nutrient capital of the ecosystem (Wondzell and King 2003). However, ash deposition during the fire, and post-fire-altered conditions for organic matter decomposition and mineralization (Wilson et al. 2002), result in high nutrient availability in the soils. Thus, fire can be considered as an important, but not conservative, mineralizing agent in Mediterranean ecosystems (St. John and Rundel 1976; Dunn, DeBano and Eberlein 1979). This transient pulse of soil fertility facilitates a rapid recovery of the vegetation (Romanyà, Casals and Vallejo 2001), which restrains further erosion losses (Rundel and Parsons 1980). During secondary succession, colonization by N2-fixing plant species and weathering of parent materials allow for new inputs of nutrients to the ecosystem. Eventually, the ecosystem recovers its typical total nutrient capital, but soil nutrient availability is low, with a significant proportion of nutrients retained in biomass and detritic pools (DeBano and Conrad 1978). Vegetation returns to a senescence stage, increasing the probability of a new fire that reinitiates the cycle (Christensen 1977).

We hypothesize, however, that when fire frequency is abnormally high, the ecosystem nutrient capital does not fully recover, and the long-term balance between fire-related nutrient outputs and succession-related nutrient inputs is upset. Long-lasting soil fertility depletion slows rates of vegetation recovery which, in turn, increases erosion rates, initiating a positive feedback loop that can lead to irreversible desertification (Boerner 1982; Schlesinger et al. 1990; Carreira, Niell and Lajtha 1994).

Our objective

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As a way to test the above-described conceptual model, we assessed the effects of different combinations of two attributes of the fire regime: i) fire frequency, and ii) time elapsed since the last fire, on surface soil and litter nutrient contents and pool sizes in a semiarid Mediterranean shrubland.

The experimental system

Link to Cobo & Carreira Fig. 2
Link to Fig. 2, ~48K

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The study area is located in the Almijara mountain range (upper Torrox river basin, Málaga, Spain), within the area of xeric influence in the southeastern part of the Iberian peninsula. The climate is dry thermic mediterranean (annual mean temperature 17-19 ºC; annual precipitation 350-600 mm, occurring mainly as torrential rain from November to March) (Nieto and Cabezudo 1988). The relief is characterized by narrow ridges and deep stream-cut V-shaped valleys with numerous small sub-basins. The parent rock is a kakiritized dolomitic marble. Dolomitic marbles are consolidated carbonated materials, but kakiritized outcrops give rise to sands almost exclusively made of pure dolomite crystals. Thus, the soils vary from sandy typic xerorthents with very high carbonate content, low nutrient availability and Mg levels toxic to plants, that develop in frequently burned sites; to entic haploxerolls with some decarbonatation and accumulation of clays, higher organic matter (mollic horizon) and available nutrient contents, that develop in long-unburned sites (Carreira, Arévalo and Niell 1996). The singularity of the soils explains the abundance in the area of endemic, dolomitophilous, plant species, as well as related plant communities (Nieto, Cabezudo and Trigo 1989).

Link to Cobo & Carreira Fig. 3
Link to Fig. 3, ~25K

The study sites consisted of a four-stand, soil and vegetation chronosequence (Dyck and Cole 1990) of recent fire history. The sampling plots were selected within each of these study sites (four adjacent, steep sub-basins 1 to 3 km apart), all in mid-hillside positions with similar elevation (300-400 m), exposure (SE) and slope (36-41º). Prior to an initial "baseline" fire (1975), the whole study area was covered by a uniform old-growth Pinus pinaster forest with dense garrigue understory.

Link to Cobo & Carreira Fig. 4
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After 1975, the four study sites chosen, each 1000 m2, differed in their fire-disturbance regime (fire-frequency and time-lag between fire events): Unit D had not burned during the 1975 baseline fire or indeed since at least the 1950s, and was used as the reference plot. The three other plots, Units A, B, and C, burned in 1975; of these, Units A and B burned a second time in 1981, and Unit A burned a third time in 1986 (that is, Unit D had 0 fires, Unit C had 1 fire, Unit B had 2 fires, and Unit A had 3 fires during the period 1975 to 2002). Current species composition is similar in all units, with different proportions of abundance. Vegetation on relatively well-developed soils consists of discontinuous stands of garrigue shrublands with Juniperus oxycedrus, Buxus balearicae and Pistacia lentiscus as dominant species, and open pine (Pinus pinaster) forests. Where frequent fires have occurred, garrigue formations are replaced by gorse (Ulex rivasgodayanus) and rockrose (Cistus clusii)-dominated dwarf-shrub vegetation that includes many dolomitophilous plant endemics (Carreira, Lajtha and Niell 1997).

Soil collection and analyses

Link to Cobo and Carreira, Figs. 5 & 6
Link to Figs. 5 & 6, ~43K

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Soils in the four sampling plots (Units A, B, C, D), were sampled during two periods, 1989-91 and 2000-02. Each spring (March-April), five new sampling sub-sites were randomly located in each Unit (1000 m2), and five compounded soil samples (0-5 cm depth) were collected. In addition, ten surface litter random samples (0.15 m2 frame) were collected per Unit.

Within 48 h after collection, litter and soil sub-samples were taken apart to calculate field moisture. Next, the litter samples were cleaned and air-dried. The soil samples were air-dried and sieved to 2 mm. Litter mass, soil gravel content and bulk density were recorded. After that, general soil chemical properties and total and labile nutrient (C, N and P) contents were measured.

For both sampling periods, litter and soil nutrient contents and pool sizes were expressed as a percentage of their value at the reference sampling plot (Unit D), and represented as a function of the number of years passed since the last fire event.

During the 1989-1991 sampling period, we also measured soil erosion rates using Verlagh boxes (Carreira, 1992). Nutrient pool sizes in litter and soil from this period were expressed as a percentage of their value at the reference plot (Unit D), together with erosion fluxes expressed as number of times above values at the reference plot, and represented as a function of site annual fire probability over the last 45 years.

What was found?

Link to Cobo & Carreira Fig. 7
Link to Fig. 7, ~20K

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When we compared changes in soil and litter nutrient pool sizes (expressed as a percentage of their value in the reference plot) and erosion fluxes (expressed as number of times above values at the reference plot) among the different study Units, we found that a linear increase in annual fire probability is followed by an exponential-type increase in erosion fluxes, but a threshold-type (Wissel 1984; Muradian 2001) decrease in nutrient pool sizes. For instance, while erosion in 1989-1991 was almost ten times higher in Unit C (burned once), and nearly one hundred times higher in Unit B (burned twice), than in the reference plot Unit D, the surface soil nutrient pool sizes at these three sites were comparable. It was only above a particular threshold of fire frequency (Fuhlendorf, Smeins and Grant 1996), represented here by Unit A (3 fires in less than 12 years) that the ecosystem soil nutrient pools were depleted, confirming the conceptual model stated above. The location of this threshold of fire frequency varies depending on whether the surface soil nutrient pool or the litter nutrient pool is considered. Our results show that nutrient pool values in the litter layer were significantly lower in the plot burned just once (Unit C) than in the reference plot, even though 14 years had passed since that single fire took place (Carreira 1992). This shows that stability, in terms of inertia (Holling 1973; Orians 1975), as a function of fire recurrence, is much greater for the surface soil nutrient pool than for the litter nutrient pool.

Link to Cobo & Carreira Fig. 8
Link to Fig. 8, ~18K

Another interesting issue that arose from our data relates to an alternative meaning for the concept of stability: elasticity (Grimm and Wissel 1997; Brang 2001). The soil nutrient pool at Unit A, the sampling plot that experienced an abnormally short fire return interval (3 fires) during 1975-1986, showed very small or even no recovery during the interval from 1989/91 (3-5 yr-old vegetation at Unit A, surface soil total N pool size about 30% of that in the reference plot) to 2000/02 (14-16 yr-old vegetation at Unit A, soil N pool size 35% of that in the reference plot), even though no new fires had taken place. In contrast, the surface soil total N pool size at Unit C (burned once), when its vegetation was 14-16 yr-old (in the 1989-91 period), was 125% of that in the reference plot. Thus, in the long term, the size of the soil nutrient capital depends more on the fact that a given threshold of fire recurrence has been surpassed at some time in the past, than on the time elapsed since the last fire event took place. This means that the soil nutrient pool, despite its relatively high inertia against fire, shows very low elasticity (that is, there are long-lasting effects if fire recurrence is high). On the other hand, the litter N content in Unit A, that was just 45% of N content in the reference plot during the first sampling period (1989-91), increased to 70% of reference values during the period 2000-02. This outstanding recovery for the litter N contents in the absence of new disturbance events, in comparison to the slight increments observed for the soil N contents and pools in the same circumstances, demonstrates the higher elasticity, although lower inertia, of nutrients in the litter layer.

Conclusions

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Our study provides solid results to interpret the most important processes involved in the mid- to long-term evolution of litter and soil nutrient contents and pools in Mediterranean shrubland ecosystems in relation to changes in attributes of the fire perturbation regime (frequency and time elapsed since the last fire), which underlie desertification processes in fire-prone, semiarid areas.

We found that erosion fluxes showed an exponential-type response curve with respect to a linear-increasing annual fire probability at the study area. However, when nutrient pools were considered, a threshold-type response curve was found. Above a given fire-frequency threshold, differences among sampling plots were more strongly related to the number of past fires (fire frequency) than to the age of the vegetation stand (number of years since the last fire). Our study indicated that in sampling plots experiencing an abnormally short fire-return interval, even transitory, during the last five decades, the current post-fire recovery rate of the nutrient capital and its associated process-rates was very low or is even absent (sensu positive degradation feedback leading to desertification; Schlesinger et al. 1990). On the other hand, in the sampling plots not surpassing such a threshold, recovery of the nutrient capital or organic matter cycling process-rates was always achieved in the short to mid-term, or is even increased with respect to the reference plot. This, in turn, stresses that perturbation is necessary for ecosystem sustainability, provided that a given perturbation regime is maintained through time and perturbation thresholds are not surpassed (Holling 1986; Chapin, Torn and Tatano 1996).

References

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Blank, R.R., L. Abraham and J.A. Young. 1994. Soil heating, nitrogen, cheatgrass and seedbed microsites. Journal of Range Management 47: 33-37.

Boerner, R.E.J. 1982. Fire and nutrient cycling in temperate ecosystems. Bioscience 32: 187-192.

Brang, P. 2001. Resistance and elasticity: Promising concepts for the management of protection forests in the European Alps. Forest Ecology and Management 145: 107-119.

Carreira, J.A. 1992. Biogeoquímica y disponibilidad del N y P en una cronosecuencia de suelos semiáridos dolomíticos asociada a distintos regímenes de incendios. Doctoral dissertation, University of Málaga, Spain.

Carreira J.A., F.X. Niell and K. Lajtha. 1994. Soil nitrogen availability and nitrification in Mediterranean shrublands of varying fire history and successional stage. Biogeochemistry 26: 189-209.

Carreira, J.A., J.R. Arévalo and F.X. Niell. 1996. Soil degradation and nutrient availability in fire-prone Mediterranean shrublands of southeastern Spain. Arid Soil Research and Rehabilitation 10: 53-64.

Carreira, J.A., K. Lajtha and F.X. Niell. 1997. Phosphorus transformations along a soil/vegetation series of fire-prone, dolomitic, semi-arid shrublands of southern Spain. Biogeochemistry 39: 87-120.

Chapin, F.S., M.S. Torn and M. Tateno. 1996. Principles of ecosystem sustainability. The American Naturalist 148: 1016-1037.

Christensen, N.L. 1977. Fire and soil-plant nutrient relations in a pine wiregrass savanna on the Coastal Plain of North Carolina. Oecologia 31: 27-44.

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Johnson, D.W., R.B. Susfalk, R.A. Dahlgren and J.M. Klopatek. 1998. Fire is more important than water for nitrogen fluxes in semi-arid forests. Environmental Science and Policy 1: 79-86.

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Rundel, P.W. 1983. Impact of fire on nutrient cycles in Mediterranean-type ecosystems with reference to chaparral. In Mediterranean-type ecosystems: The role of nutrients, ed. F.J. Kruger, D.T. Mitchel and J.V.M. Jarvis, 192-207. Berlin: Springer-Verlag.

Scarascia-Mugnozza, G., H. Oswald, P. Piussi and K. Radoglou. 2000. Forests of the Mediterranean region: Gaps in knowledge and research needs. Forest Ecology and Management 132: 97-109.

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Tiedemann, A.R., J.O. Klemmedson and E.L. Bull. 2000. Solution of forest health problems with prescribed fire: Are forest productivity and wildlife at risk? Forest Ecology and Management 127 (1-3): 1-18.

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Wondzell, S.M. and J.G. King. 2003. Postfire erosional processes in the Pacific Northwest and Rocky Mountain regions. Forest Ecology and Management 178 (1-2): 75-87.

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Author information

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María del Carmen COBO (mccobo@ujaen.es) is a Ph.D. student in the Department of Zoology, Botany and Ecology, University of Jaén; she will soon defend her doctoral thesis "Small scale spatial heterogeneity and soil-plant relationships in semiarid ecosystems from SE Spain." She also collaborates on research in Dr. M.W. Palmer's lab in the Department of Botany at Oklahoma State University, and is a member of the Andalusian research group "Forest ecology and landscape dynamics" conducted by her advisor, Dr. J.A. Carreira.

José Antonio CARREIRA (jafuente@ujaen.es) is a Professor of Ecology in the Department of Zoology, Botany and Ecology, University of Jaén. At present, he is the main researcher of the research group RNM-296 (Andalusian government catalogue) "Forest ecology and landscape dynamics," operating at the University of Jaén.

Authors' correspondence address:
Departamento de Biología Animal, Biología Vegetal y Ecología
Facultad de Ciencias Experimentales
Universidad de Jaén
23071-Jaén
SPAIN

 

Additional web resources

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University of Jaen, RNM-296: Forest ecology and landscape dynamics
http://www.ujaen.es/investiga/rnm296/rnm296.html
This Spanish-language site provides more information on the research activities of the co-authors and their colleagues in this research group.

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