Tundra fire effects on soils and three plant communities along a hill-slope gradient

ABSTRACT. During summer 1977, wildfires burned extensive areas of low arctic tundra in the Seward Peninsula, Alaska. The present study was initiated in July 1978 to determine the effects of these fires on tundra soils and vegetation. Nine 10 m X I m permanent belt transects were established at regul...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Charles H. Racine
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 1981
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.541.3114
http://pubs.aina.ucalgary.ca/arctic/Arctic34-1-71.pdf
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Summary:ABSTRACT. During summer 1977, wildfires burned extensive areas of low arctic tundra in the Seward Peninsula, Alaska. The present study was initiated in July 1978 to determine the effects of these fires on tundra soils and vegetation. Nine 10 m X I m permanent belt transects were established at regular intervals along the topographic gradient of a burned hill-slope in the central Seward Peninsula near Imuruk Lake. Soil characteristics and plant species density and cover were determined in each of the 90 1-m2 plots on this slope during July of both 1978 and 1979. Soils and vegetation had been quantitatively sampled on this slope in 1973, thereby providing pre-fire comparisons; a sedge tussock-shrub tundra community with mud circles occupied the poorly drained footslope and a birch and ericaceous shrub tundra community with elongate turf-banked frost boils had developed on the moderately well-drained backslope. The broad, poorly-drained summit of this slope was occupied by sedge-shrub tundra with low-centered polygons. The severity of burning in July 1977 varied along this slope with moderate to heavy burning of the birch and ericaceous shrub tundra and light to moderate burning of the sedge tussock-shrub tundra and sedge-shrub tundra communities. Post-fire (1978 and 1979) changes in plant cover, species composition and soil thaw depths are shown to vary with position on the slope and burning severity. The relationship of these changes to natural succession in the absence of fire is discussed. RhSUM6. Lors de 1’ttt 1977, les feux spontants ont bdlC de vastes ttendues de toundra dans la ptninsule de Seward, en Alaska, dans le bas Arctique. La prtsente ttude dtbuta en juillet 1978 afh de dtterminer les effets de ces feux sur les sols et la vtgetation de la toundra. Neuf bandes permanentes au transect, mesurant 10 m X 1 m, furent ttablies B des intervalles rtguliers le long du gradient topographique