Impacts of prescribed burning on urban forest soil: Minor changes in net greenhouse gas emissions despite evident alterations of microbial community structures
Tipo de material:
TextoSeries ; Applied Soil Ecology, 158, p.103780, 2021Trabajos contenidos: - Manyun Zhang
- Weijin Wang
- Li Tang
- Marijke Heenan
- Dianjie Wang
- Zhihong Xu
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Knowledge of the impacts of prescribed burning on ecosystem functions could help to improve forest management practices. However, relative to forest safety and aesthetic values, changes in soil properties and processes after prescribed burning are not well understood. This study aimed to quantify changes in soil microbial communities and greenhouse gas emissions following prescribed burning in a subtropical suburban forest. The soil microbial communities were determined with the Illumina sequencing methods. Carbon dioxide (CO2), nitrous oxide (N2O)and methane (CH4)emissions were quantified under three different soil water contents, and net greenhouse gas emissions were derived from emissions of the three gases after 7 days of incubation and expressed in CO2-equivalent. Prescribed burning had negligible impacts on soil bacterial and fungal community diversities but significantly changed soil microbial community structures. Compared to the unburnt soil, the relative abundances of Chloroflexi increased by 86
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