Title: Soil physical properties regulate lethal heating during burning of woody residues
Author: Busse, Matt; Shestak, Carol; Hubbert, Ken; Knapp, Eric
Date: 2010
Source: Soil Science Society of America Journal 74(3): 947-955
Description: Temperatures well in excess of the lethal threshold for roots (60°C) have been measured in forest soils when woody fuels are burned. Whether this heat pulse is strongly moderated by soil moisture or soil texture is not fully understood, however. We measured soil heat profi les during 60 experimental burns, identifying changes in maximum soil temperature and heat duration above 60°C as a function of soil moisture and soil texture. Experimental treatments
included a factorial combination of soil moisture (~5, 15, 30, and 45% v/v) and soil textural (sandy loam, sandy loam–pumice, loam, clay loam) gradients, with a surface fuel load comprised of a dense layer of masticated wood. Soil moisture had a strong infl uence on heat transfer. A volumetric moisture content of 20% or greater quenched the heat pulse in all soils at depths of 2.5 cm and lower. In comparison, soil temperatures in dry soil far exceeded the lethal threshold to a depth of 10 cm. Diff erences in heating characteristics among the four soil types were minor despite their dissimilarities in texture, porosity, bulk density, and resumed thermal conductivity. It was also shown that intact soil cores were required to produce accurate heat profi les during burning, as maximum soil temperatures in the surface 5 cm were overestimated by 40 to 100°C using disturbed soil (sieved and packed). The empirical results along with a simple predictive model of soil heating show that burning of woody fuels when underlying soils have 20% volumetric moisture or greater is an eff ective means for limiting lethal heating in a variety of soils.
Keywords: fire effects, fire ecology, soil heating
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Citation
Busse, Matt; Shestak, Carol; Hubbert, Ken; Knapp, Eric 2010. Soil physical properties regulate lethal heating during burning of woody residues. Soil Science Society of America Journal 74(3): 947-955.