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International Journal of Wildland Fire International Journal of Wildland Fire Society
Journal of the International Association of Wildland Fire

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This article has been peer reviewed and accepted for publication. It is in production and has not been edited, so may differ from the final published form.

Past Fire Shaping Future Fuel: influence of recent fire history on forest foliage chemistry

Margot Schneider, Geoffrey Cary, Elle Bowd, Claire Foster

Abstract

Background: Knowledge of how fire regimes influence flammability, and its role in shaping future fire regimes, exists mostly at species composition and ecosystem levels. The effect of fire regimes on fuel at the chemical level is poorly known. Aim: We aimed to empirically investigate the association between recent fire history and forest foliage chemistry; and explore potential implications for forest fuel flammability. Methods: Using an orthogonal study design, we investigated the effects of fire frequency and time since fire on the chemical composition of Eucalyptus pilularis leaves from forest canopies and surface litter in south-eastern Australia. Key Results: We found high fire frequency (fire-return interval 10-13 years) was associated with higher C:N, C:P, and C:K ratios in E. pilularis surface litter, and higher C:P in canopy leaves. Conclusions: Nutrients, including nitrogen and phosphorous reduce flammability of plant tissues, and hence, the observed differences in leaf nutrients between high and low fire frequency sites could have important implications for future flammability of these forests. Implications: Our study has demonstrated a relationship between fire frequency and leaf nutrient stoichiometry, which may act as a mechanism through which repeated fires could increase fuel flammability. This warrants further investigation in other environments.

WF22215  Accepted 03 August 2024

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