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Topography and Wildfire Jointly Mediate Postfire Ecosystem Multifunctionality in a Chinese Boreal Forest

  • Jianjian Kong
  • , Zifan Ding
  • , Wenhua Cai
  • , Jiaxing Zu
  • , Bo Liu
  • , Jian Yang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

Both topography and wildfire can exert significant influences on ecosystem processes and functions during boreal forest successions. However, their impacts on ecosystem multifunctionality (EMF) remain unclear. A mega-fire burned an area of 8700 hectares in the Great Xing’an Mountains in 2000, creating a wide range of fire severity levels across various topographic positions. This provided a unique opportunity to explore the impacts of mixed-severity fire disturbance in boreal forests. We evaluated the effect pathways of wildfire and topography on aboveground multifunctionality (AEMF), soil multifunctionality (SEMF), and overall multifunctionality (OEMF). We found that high-severity burning resulted in lower AEMF, SEMF, and OEMF relative to low-severity burning. Topographic positions significantly influenced SEMF and OEMF, but not AEMF. Specifically, both lower SEMF and OEMF were observed on south-facing slopes. The structure equation model analysis showed that aspect had exerted strong indirect effects on AEMF, SEMF, and OEMF by affecting soil moisture and regenerated tree density (RTD). Fire severity had indirect negative effects on AEMF and OEMF by reducing RTD and on SEMF by reducing soil bacterial diversity and RTD. Our study elucidates the necessity of considering postfire site environments to better manage forest ecosystems and, in turn, promote the rapid recovery of boreal ecosystem functions.

Original languageEnglish
Article number417
JournalFire
Volume7
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 by the authors.

Funding

This research was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (32271899, 32101328 and 32171562), fund of CAS Key Laboratory of Forest Ecology and Silviculture, Institute of Applied Ecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences (KLFES-2033) and the Major Incubation project of Shenyang Normal University (ZD202301).

FundersFunder number
CAS Key Laboratory of Forest Ecology and Silviculture
National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC)32271899, 32101328, 32171562
Shenyang Normal UniversityZD202301
Institute of Applied Ecology, Chinese Academy of SciencesKLFES-2033

    Keywords

    • aspect
    • ecosystem functioning
    • microbial diversity
    • tree recruits
    • wildfire

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Forestry
    • Building and Construction
    • Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality
    • Environmental Science (miscellaneous)
    • Safety Research
    • Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)

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