Title: Immediate Changes
1Fire Severity Amount of Change Following Fire
(Percent Combusted)
- Immediate Changes
- Carbon Emissions, Tree Mortality
- Short Term Changes
- Erosion, Water Quality, Nutrient Availability
- Long Term Changes
- Future Flammability, Animal Browse
2Fire Severity Amount of Change Following Fire
(Percent Combusted)
- Reconstructed Organic Matter (CN) Pools
- Plot Scale Quantitative EffortHigh
- Composite Burn Index (CBI)
- Plot Scale Semi Quantitative EffortMedium
- Normalized Burn Ratio (NBR)
- Remote Sensing Semi Quantitative EffortLow
3Fire Severity Amount of Change Following Fire
(Percent Combusted)
How do we measure something that burned away?
4Biomass Reconstruction
- Adventitious roots on black spruce trees grow at
the surface of the organic soil - Roots are still visible after fire
- Post-fire measurements can reconstruct pre-fire
organic soil depth and C and N pools - Aboveground tree measurements, visual estimates,
plus allometric equations used to reconstruct
canopy
green moss dead moss fibric humic
5Organic Soil Reconstruction
6Organic Soil Reconstruction
- Measure depth horizons of remaining post-fire
organic soil - Adventitious root collar height above burn
(correct for deeper burning under trees) - soil core samples analyzed by horizon for bulk
density, C and N - (burned layers reconstructed from soil
measurements in unburned)
7Canopy Reconstruction
- Measure tree density and basal area
- Visually estimate Combustion for needles, fine
branches, coarse branches and cones - Black spruce allometric equations used to
estimate quantity of canopy fine fuels - 50 C
- 0.4 - 1 N
8Composite Burn Index (CBI)
- A scaled index to visually
- quantify and standardize
- fire effects over large
- areas.
- Five strata
- CBI scale
- Low (0.5-1)
- Moderate (1.0-2.0)
- High (2.0-3.0)
9How does CBI compare to combustion estimates?
- CBI significantly
- positively related to
- mass combustion
- CBI better correlated with organic soil
combustion
10How does CBI compare to C emissions?
- mean canopy and soil C emissions were 0.4 and
1.5 kg/m2
- CBI significantly
- positively related to
- C lost
- CBI better correlated
- with organic soil C emissions
11How well does CBI correlate with our fire
severity estimates?
12Summary
- Adventitious root method is a good proxy for
pre-fire organic soil height - Correct adventitious root measurements for deeper
burning at tree, and for offset between root and
organic soil surface height - CBI is a great estimator of mass lost, and
pretty good for C emissions - CBI is a better predictor for organic soil mass
and C emissions, explaining from 45-64 of the
variation
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182 Upland Black Spruce Burns
- Yukon Charley 1999
- Fire start mid-June
- NBR 9-Sept
- CBI-NBR trend
- R2 0.81, n32
- R2 0.64, n47
- Boundary 2004
- Fire start mid-June
- NBR 6-Sept
- CBI-NBR trend
- R2 0.30, n32
- R2 0.43, n28
- R2 0.29, n73
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21dNBR 797
dNBR 672
dNBR 913
22Lessons Learned
- Remote sensing estimates best across wide range
of severity - Unreliable to estimates at high fire severity
- Estimates should be calibrated by vegetation type
- Solar elevation/topography problems
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24Field Estimates CBI (0 to 3)
25How do we measure something that burned away?
Using the adventitious root method to measure
fire severity
26Measurementsat burned sites understory
Measurementsat unburned sites understory
- Depth of post-fire organic soil including
horizons - adventitious root collar height above burn
- soil core samples analyzed by horizon for bulk
density, C and N
Adventitious root offset Distance between high
adventitious root and green moss
1. Dead moss
2. Fibric
3. Humic
271. Green moss
2. Brown moss
3. Fibric
4. Humic
unburned sites four horizons
28Does the adventitious root method work?
- Root collar height corresponds to organic soil
height - add 3.2 cm
- pre-fire organic soil
- depth post-fire depth Root collar height
Root Collar offset
29Adventitious root height
- Adventitious roots on black spruce trees grow at
the surface of the organic soil - Roots are still visible after fire
- We can reconstruct pre-fire organic soil depth
and C and N pools
Adventitious roots
Moss
Adventitious root height Depth of post-fire
soil organic layer Pre-fire soil organic layer
depth
Fibric
Humic
Mineral soil