Effects of experimental fuel additions on fire intensity and severity: unexpected carbon resilience of a neotropical forest

10 de janeiro de 2016

jan 10, 2016

Paulo M. Brando, Claudinei Oliveria‐Santos, Wanderley Rocha, Roberta Cury, Michael T. Coe

Global changes and associated droughts, heat waves, logging activities, and forest fragmentation may intensify fires in Amazonia by altering forest microclimate and fuel dynamics. To isolate the effects of fuel loads on fire behavior and fire‐induced changes in forest carbon cycling, we manipulated fine fuel loads in a fire experiment located in southeast Amazonia. We predicted that a 50% increase in fine fuel loads would disproportionally increase fire intensity and severity (i.e., tree mortality and losses in carbon stocks) due to multiplicative effects of fine fuel loads on the rate of fire spread, fuel consumption, and burned area.

The experiment followed a fully replicated randomized block design (N = 6) comprised of unburned control plots and burned plots that were treated with and without fine fuel additions. The fuel addition treatment significantly increased burned area (+22%) and consequently canopy openness (+10%), fine fuel combustion (+5%), and mortality of individuals ≥5 cm in diameter at breast height (dbh; +37%).

Surprisingly, we observed nonsignificant effects of the fuel addition treatment on fireline intensity, and no significant differences among the three treatments for (i) mortality of large trees (≥30 cm dbh), (ii) aboveground forest carbon stocks, and (iii) soil respiration. It was also surprising that postfire tree growth and wood increment were higher in the burned plots treated with fuels than in the unburned control. These results suggest that (i) fine fuel load accumulation increases the likelihood of larger understory fires and (ii) single, low‐intensity fires weakly influence carbon cycling of this primary neotropical forest, although delayed postfire mortality of large trees may lower carbon stocks over the long term. Overall, our findings indicate that increased fine fuel loads alone are unlikely to create threshold conditions for high‐intensity, catastrophic fires during nondrought years.

Full article.

Artigo completo.

Baixar (sujeito à disponibilidade)

Download (subject to availability)

Veja também

See also

Sumário Executivo – Primeiro diálogo sobre a sustentabilidade e a rastreabilidade da cadeia da carne bovina e do couro

Sumário Executivo – Primeiro diálogo sobre a sustentabilidade e a rastreabilidade da cadeia da carne bovina e do couro

Sumário executivo do primeiro Diálogo Técnico sobre a Sustentabilidade e a Rastreabilidade das cadeias da carne bovina e do couro, realizado no dia 9 de março de 2022, com o tema: o papel do processo de análise prévia sobre conformidade e risco – o due diligence.

O sistema participativo de monitoramento e avaliação do PA Moju I e II e PDS Igarapé do Anta no estado do Pará: teoria e construção

O sistema participativo de monitoramento e avaliação do PA Moju I e II e PDS Igarapé do Anta no estado do Pará: teoria e construção

Essa cartilha tem o objetivo de apresentar o que é o sistema participativo de monitoramento e avaliação e para que serve; documentar o processo de construção e da primeira fase da implantação desse sistema para o
PA Moju I &II e PDS Igarapé do Anta; refletir sobre as lições aprendidas durante esse processo; e sugerir um passo-a-passo para dar continuidade à implantação do sistema nos próximos anos.