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Widespread and systematic effects of fire on plant–soil water relations

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Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

AbstractWildfire activity and the hydrological cycle are strongly interlinked. While it is well known that wildfire occurrence and intensity are controlled by water availability, less is known about the effects of wildfire on plant and soil water cycling, especially at large scales. Here we investigate this by analysing fire impacts on the coupling between plant and soil water content, at the global scale, using remote sensing of soil moisture, vegetation water content and burned area. We find a strong effect of fire on plant–soil water relations, accelerating soil moisture loss by 17% and leading to faster gains in vegetation water content by 62%, both of which are positively related to fire severity and largest in forests. This effect is spatially extensive, with accelerated soil moisture loss found in 67%, and increased vegetation water content gain found in 67% of all analysed burned areas. After fire, plants also tended to have less control on their water content (that is, were more anisohydric). In summary, fire changes ecosystem functioning by increasing ecosystem water losses and shifting the relationship between soil and vegetation water budgets. With climate change, wildfire is likely to play an increasingly important role in ecosystem water cycling and subsequent ecosystem recovery.

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Acknowledgements: M.J.B. was supported by the University of Cambridge Harding Distinguished Postgraduate Scholars Programme. A.F.A.P. was supported by funding from United Kingdom Research and Innovation Grant G123484.


Funder: University of Cambridge Harding Distinguished Postgraduate Scholarship


Funder: United Kingdom Research and Innovation Grant G123484

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Journal Title

Nature Geoscience

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Journal ISSN

1752-0894
1752-0908

Volume Title

17

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International