Effects of Bioturbation by Earthworms on Litter Flammability in Young and Mature Afforested Stands

Datum vydání
2025Publikováno v
FireNakladatel / Místo vydání
MDPI AGRočník / Číslo vydání
8 (6)ISBN / ISSN
ISSN: 2571-6255Informace o financování
TA0//SS02030018
MSM//SVV260697
UK//COOP
EU//LIFE17 IPE/CZ/000005
MSM//EF16_013/0001782
Metadata
Zobrazit celý záznamKolekce
Tato publikace má vydavatelskou verzi s DOI 10.3390/fire8060225
Abstrakt
The quantity, quality, and accumulation rate of plant litter play a key role in forest floor flammability and, by extension, fire regimes. The varying foliage properties of different tree species also determine litter's decomposition and its accumulation on the forest floor. The removal of litter by soil fauna, i.e., bioturbation, depends on both the dominant tree species and the successional stage of the forest stand. This research involved laboratory mesocosm experiments aiming to determine the effects of litter quality and earthworm activity on the flammability of the forest floor material at different successional ages. The mesocosms simulated the planting of four tree species (the broadleaf species Alnus glutinosa (L.) Gaertn. (Black alder) and Quercus robur L. (English oak) and the conifers Picea omorika (Pan & ccaron;i & cacute;) Purk. (Serbian spruce) and Pinus nigra J.F. Arnold (Austrian pine)) at a reclamation site near Sokolov (NW Czechia). The mesocosms contained litter from these different tree species, placed directly on overburden soil (immature soil) or on well-developed Oe and A layers (mature soil), inoculated or not inoculated with earthworms, and incubated for 4 months. The surface material in the mesocosms was then subjected to simulated burn events, and the fire path and soil temperature changes were recorded. Burn testing showed that litter type (tree species) and soil maturity significantly influenced flammability. Pine had longer burning times and burning paths and higher post-burn temperatures than those of the other tree species. The immature soil with earthworms had significantly shorter burning times, whereas in the mature soil, earthworms had no effect. We conclude that earthworms have a significant, immediate effect on the litter flammability of immature soils.
Klíčová slova
bioturbation, earthworms, fauna, burning experiment, litter,
Trvalý odkaz
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14178/3732Licence
Licence pro užití plného textu výsledku: Creative Commons Uveďte původ 4.0 International
