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Fire suppression and ecosystem carbon storage

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TLDR
A 35-year controlled burning experiment in Minnesota oak savanna showed that fire frequency had a great impact on ecosystem carbon (C) stores, with most carbon stored in woody biomass.
Abstract
A 35-year controlled burning experiment in Minnesota oak savanna showed that fire frequency had a great impact on ecosystem carbon (C) stores. Specifically, compared to the historical fire regime, fire suppression led to an average of 1.8 Mg·ha−1·yr−1 of C storage, with most carbon stored in woody biomass. Forest floor carbon stores were also significantly impacted by fire frequency, but there were no detectable effects of fire suppression on carbon in soil and fine roots combined, or in woody debris. Total ecosystem C stores averaged ∼110 Mg/ha in stands experiencing presettlement fire frequencies, but ∼220 Mg/ha in stands experiencing fire suppression. If comparable rates of C storage were to occur in other ecosystems in response to the current extent of fire suppression in the United States, fire suppression in the USA might account for 8–20% of missing global carbon.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Fire as a global 'herbivore': the ecology and evolution of flammable ecosystems.

TL;DR: The recent literature is reviewed, drawing parallels between fire and herbivores as alternative consumers of vegetation, and pointing to the common questions and some surprisingly different answers that emerge from viewing fire as a globally significant consumer that is analogous to herbivory.
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The global distribution of ecosystems in a world without fire

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The Importance of Land-Use Legacies to Ecology and Conservation

TL;DR: In this article, the importance of land-use history and its legacies in most ecological systems has been recognized as a legitimate and essential subject of environmental science, and recognition of these historical legacies adds explanatory power to our understanding of modern conditions at scales from organisms to the globe and reduces missteps in anticipating or managing for future conditions.
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Ecosystem carbon loss with woody plant invasion of grasslands.

TL;DR: A clear negative relationship between precipitation and changes in soil organic carbon and nitrogen content when grasslands were invaded by woody vegetation is found, with drier sites gaining, and wetter sites losing, soilorganic carbon.
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Contrasting Effects of Plant Richness and Composition on Insect Communities: A Field Experiment

TL;DR: In insect communities, insect species richness increased as plant species richness and plant functional group richness increased, and both factors may explain how the loss of plant diversity influences higher trophic levels.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Past and prospective carbon storage in United States forests

TL;DR: In this paper, historical changes in carbon storage in US forests have been estimated from periodic, comprehensive national inventories of forest resources, primarily in the East, mainly in the US timberland.
Journal ArticleDOI

Forest fires in Russia: carbon dioxide emissions to the atmosphere

TL;DR: A large area of Russian forest burn annually is burned, and contributions to the global carbon cycle and the flux of greenhouse gases to the atmosphere are limited.
Journal ArticleDOI

Model analysis of the effects of soil age, fires and harvesting on the carbon storage of boreal forest soils

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors measured the carbon in the soil along a 5000-year chronosequence in coastal western Finland and used a simple dynamic model of decomposition to determine the causes for changes in the amounts of carbon stored in the soils of boreal forests.
ReportDOI

Allometric Biomass Equations for 98 Species of Herbs, Shrubs, and Small Trees

TL;DR: Biomass regression coefficients from the literature for the allometric equation form are presented for 98 species of shrubs and herbs in the northern U.S. and Canada.
Book ChapterDOI

Potential impacts of climate change on fire regimes in the tropics based on MAGICC and a GISS GCM-derived lightning model

TL;DR: In this article, the main known interactions of fire, vegetation, and atmosphere are summarized and the potential impacts of climate change on tropical fire regimes are investigated using a GISS GCM-based lightning and fire model and the Model for the Assessment of Greenhouse Gas-Induced Climate Change (MAGICC).
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