Abstract

Physiological groups of soil microorganisms were investigated in a forest (Pinus pinaster Sol.) to asses their response to wildfire-induced soil changes. Microbial fluctuations were recorded 1 month and 1 year after the fire, both in the field and during controlled soil incubations. In both the burned and the unburned soil, starch-mineralizing microbes predominated over cellulose-mineralizing microbes; there were a relatively high number of ammonium-producers, whereas nitrite and nitrate producers were scarce. In the short term, burning produced a decreasing to nearly undetectable number in cellulase-producers whilst amylase-producers, and especially, ammonifying microbes increased, and the nitrifying groups did not change. One year after the wildfire, the burning effect was slightly overcome by cellulolytic microorganisms and the amylolytic population was slightly decreased; the improvement of ammonifiers was reduced, ammonium oxidizers were positively affected and nitrite oxidizers continued to be unaffected by the fire. The trends of populations during soil incubation indicated that, in the long term, the effect of burning will probably be nil on ammonifiers, somewhat negative on cellulolytic and amylolytic microbes and slightly positive on nitrite- and nitrate-formers.

References

[1]

Chandler
C.
Cheney
P.
Thomas
P.
Trabaud
L.
Williams
D.
, Eds)
1983
In:
Fire in Forestry. Vol. I. Forest Fire Behavior and Effects
2nd Edn.,
Wiley
,
New York
.

[2]

Ahlgren
I.F.
(
1974
)
The effect of fire on soil organisms
In:
Fire and Ecosystems
Kozlowski
T.T.
Ahlgren
C.E.
, Eds) pp
47
72
Academic Press
,
New York
.

[3]

Vázquez
F.J.
Acea
M.J.
Carballas
T.
(
1993
)
Soil microbial populations after wildfire
FEMS Microbiol. Ecol.
,
13
,
93
104
.

[4]

Díaz-Raviña
M.
Prieto
A.
Acea
M.J.
Carballas
T.
(
1992
)
Fumigation-extraction method to estimate microbial biomass in heated soils
Soil Biol. Biochem.
,
24
,
259
264
.

[5]

Acea
M.J.
Carballas
T.
(
1990
)
Principal components analysis of the soil microbial population of humid zone of Galicia (Spain)
Soil. Biol. Biochem.
,
22
,
749
759
.

[6]

Alexander
M.
(
1967
)
Introduction to Soil Microbiology
Wiley
,
New York
.

[7]

Prieto-Fernández
A.
Villar
M.C.
Carballas
M.
Carballas
T.
(
1993
)
Short term effects of a wildfire on the nitrogen status and its mineralization kinetics in an Atlantic forest soil
Soil Biol. Biochem.
,
25
,
1657
1664
.

[8]

Dunn
P.H.
DeBano
L.F.
Eberlein
G.E.
(
1979
)
Effects of burning on chaparral soils. II. Soil microbes and nitrogen mineralisation
Soil Sci. Soc. Am. J.
,
43
,
509
514
.

[9]

Kutiel
P.
Shaviv
A.
(
1990
)
Effects of soil types, plant composition and leaching processes on soil nutrients following a simulated postfire
, In:
Proc. Int. Conf. Forest Fire Research
Coimbra, Portugal, pp
1
11
C03.

[10]

Jones
J.M.
Richards
B.N.
(
1977
)
Effect of reforestation on turnover of 15N-labelled nitrate and ammonium in relation to changes in soil microflora
Soil Biol. Biochem.
,
9
,
383
392
.

[11]

Meiklejohn
J.
(
1955
)
The effects of bush burning on the microflora of a Kenya upland soil
J. Soil Sci.
,
6
,
111
118
.

[12]

Ahlgren
I.F.
Ahlgren
C.E.
(
1960
)
Ecological effects of forest fires
Bot. Rev.
,
26
,
483
533
.

[13]

Nodar
R.
Acea
M.J.
Carballas
T.
(
1992
)
Microbiological response to Ca(OH)2 treatments in a forest soil
FEMS Microbiol. Ecol.
,
86
,
213
219
.

[14]

Díaz-Raviña
M.
Acea
M.J.
Carballas
T.
(
1993
)
Microbial biomass and C and N mineralization in forest soils
Biores. Technol.
,
43
,
161
167
.

[15]

Martikainen
P.J.
(
1985
)
Numbers of autotrophic nitrifiers and nitrification in fertilized forest soil
Soil Biol. Biochem.
,
17
,
245
248
.

[16]

Binkley
D.
(
1986
)
Forest Nutrition Management
Wiley-Interscience
,
New York
.

[17]

González-Prieto
S.J.
Carballas
M.
Carballas
T.
(
1991
)
Mineralization of a nitrogen-bearing organic substrate model 14C, 15N-glycine in two acid soils
Soil Biol. Biochem.
,
23
,
53
63
.

This content is only available as a PDF.