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Soil nitrogen dynamics three years after a severe Araucaria–Nothofagus forest fire
Authors:Y. RIVAS  D. HUYGENS  H. KNICKER  R. GODOY  F. MATUS  P. BOECKX
Affiliation:1. Facultad de Ciencias Forestales, Universidad Austral de Chile;2. Instituto de Ingeniería Agraria y Suelos, Facultad de Ciencias Agrarias, Universidad Austral de Chile, Casilla 567, Valdivia, Chile (Email: dries.huygens@ugent.be);3. Laboratory of Applied Physical Chemistry‐ISOFYS, Ghent University, Gent, Belgium;4. Centro del Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas en Sevilla, Instituto de Recursos Naturales and Agrobiología, Sevilla, Spain;5. Instituto de Botánica, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Austral de Chile;6. Departamento de Ciencias Químicas, Universidad de La Frontera, Temuco, Chile;7. Agriculture and Agri‐Food Canada, Ottawa, Canada
Abstract:Wildfires have shaped the biogeography of south Chilean Araucaria–Nothofagus rainforest vegetation patterns, but their impact on soil properties and associated nutrient cycling remains unclear. Nitrogen (N) availability shows a site‐specific response to wildfire events indicating the need for an increased understanding of underlying mechanisms that drive changes in soil N cycling. In this study, we selected unburned and burned sites in a large area of the National Park Tolhuaca that was affected by a stand‐replacing wildfire in February 2002. We conducted net N cycling flux measurements (net ammonification, net nitrification and net N mineralization assays) on soils sampled 3 years after fire. In addition, samples were physically fractionated and natural abundance of C and N, and 13C‐NMR analyses were performed. Results indicated that standing inorganic N pools were greater in the burned soil, but that no main differences in net N cycling fluxes were observed between unburned and burned sites. In both sites, net ammonification and net nitrification fluxes were low or negative, indicating N immobilization. Multiple linear regression analyses indicated that soil N cycling could largely be explained by two parameters: light fraction (LF) soil organic matter N content and aromatic Chemical Oxidation Resistant Carbon (CORECarom), a relative measure for char. The LF fraction, a strong NH4+ sink, decreased as a result of fire, while CORECarom increased in the burned soil profile and stimulated NO3 production. The absence of increased total net nitrification might relate to a decrease in heterotrophic nitrification after wildfire. We conclude that (i) wildfire induced a shift in N transformation pathways, but not in total net N mineralization, and (ii) stable isotope measurements are a useful tool to assess post‐fire soil organic matter dynamics.
Keywords:13C‐NMR  Andisol  Chile  N cycling  organic matter fractionation  stable isotope
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