野火后机械播种对怀俄明州大沙棘群落土壤特性的影响

IF 2.4 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q2 ECOLOGY Rangeland Ecology & Management Pub Date : 2024-08-05 DOI:10.1016/j.rama.2024.06.011
Brian M. Morra , Beth A. Newingham , Amy C. Ganguli , Brian K. Howard , Nancy L. Shaw
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引用次数: 0

摘要

美国西部牧场发生野火后植被减少,可能导致外来一年生牧草的入侵和风蚀造成的土壤流失增加。为了应对这些威胁,恢复工作者通常采用各种机械播种方法(如钻孔播种和机械混合播种)。尽管这些方法被普遍使用,但关于机械播种(在野火扰动之后)产生的额外扰动如何进一步加剧风蚀造成的土壤流失的信息却很少。在此,我们比较了两场野火后机械播种技术对土壤性质的影响,这两场野火发生在气候相似的地区,但土壤质地(淤泥质壤土和砾质壤土)却截然不同。我们使用牧场耧车或最小耕作耧车开沟或将播撒的种子拌入土壤,根据土壤团聚体稳定性、水平沉积通量、地表微地形和土壤压实度,量化了未燃烧地、燃烧后未播种地和播种地的风蚀风险。与野火造成的影响相比,机械播种的影响较小。在烧毁地区,不同地点之间的土壤稳定性差异最大。野火过后,细粒土壤的场地稳定性下降幅度最大,与未燃烧地区相比,这里的水平沉积物迁移量增加了近五个数量级。尽管最初存在这些差异,但细粒度土壤的场地稳定性可能比粗粒度场地的稳定性有更大程度的改善。此外,我们还发现,不同类型的耧车对场地稳定性的影响微乎其微,相反,犁沟播种与撒播播种在土壤性质上的差异最大。这里发现的恢复对场地稳定性的不同结果,以及野火对地貌影响的空间范围,突出了在更多因土壤、植物、地貌和气候变量而异的地点对场地稳定性进行火后监测的重要性。
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Effects of Postwildfire Mechanical Seeding on Soil Properties in Wyoming Big Sagebrush Communities

Reduction of vegetation following wildfire in rangelands of the western United States can result in invasion of exotic annual grasses and elevated soil loss to wind erosion. In response to these threats, various mechanical seeding methods (such as drill seeding and mechanical mixing of broadcast seeds) are commonly employed by restoration practitioners. Despite their common use, little information exists about how additional disturbance from mechanical seeding (following wildfire disturbance) may further contribute to soil loss from wind erosion. Here, we compared the effects of mechanical seeding techniques on soil properties following two wildfires occurring in similar climates with contrasting soil textures (silty loam and gravelly loam soils). Using either a rangeland or minimum-till drill to create furrows or mix broadcasted seeds into soils, we quantified wind erosion risk for unburned sites, burned nonseeded sites, and seeded sites according to soil aggregate stability, horizontal sediment flux, surface microtopography, and soil compaction. Effects of mechanical seeding were small relative to those created by wildfire. For burned areas, differences in site stability were greatest between sites. Following wildfire, the largest decrease in site stability occurred in fine-textured soils, where horizontal sediment transport was increased by nearly five orders of magnitude relative to unburned areas. Despite these initial differences, site stability in fine-textured soils may have improved to a greater degree than stability at the coarse-textured site. Furthermore, we found minimal differences between drill types on site stability but, instead, observed that the largest differences in soil properties were created by furrow versus broadcast seeding. The different outcomes of rehabilitation on site stability found here, paired with the spatial extent to which wildfire affects landscapes, highlights the importance of postfire monitoring of site stability in more locations that vary by soil, plant, landscape, and climatic variables.

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来源期刊
Rangeland Ecology & Management
Rangeland Ecology & Management 农林科学-环境科学
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
13.00%
发文量
87
审稿时长
12-24 weeks
期刊介绍: Rangeland Ecology & Management publishes all topics-including ecology, management, socioeconomic and policy-pertaining to global rangelands. The journal''s mission is to inform academics, ecosystem managers and policy makers of science-based information to promote sound rangeland stewardship. Author submissions are published in five manuscript categories: original research papers, high-profile forum topics, concept syntheses, as well as research and technical notes. Rangelands represent approximately 50% of the Earth''s land area and provision multiple ecosystem services for large human populations. This expansive and diverse land area functions as coupled human-ecological systems. Knowledge of both social and biophysical system components and their interactions represent the foundation for informed rangeland stewardship. Rangeland Ecology & Management uniquely integrates information from multiple system components to address current and pending challenges confronting global rangelands.
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