Effects of solar heating on the moisture dynamics of forest floor litter in humid environments: composition, structure, and position matter

Author:

Kreye Jesse K.1,Hiers J. Kevin2,Varner J. Morgan3,Hornsby Ben4,Drukker Saunders2,O’Brien Joseph J.4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecosystem Science and Management, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802, USA.

2. Tall Timbers Research Station, Tallahassee, FL 32312, USA.

3. USDA Forest Service, Pacific Wildland Fire Sciences Lab, Pacific Northwest Research Station, Seattle, WA 98103, USA.

4. USDA Forest Service, Center for Forest Disturbance Science, Southern Research Station, Athens, GA 30602, USA.

Abstract

Much of fire behavior is driven by fine-scale patterns of fuel moisture; however, moisture predictions typically occur over large scales. The source of fine-scale variation in moisture results from a combination of fuelbed properties and overstory forest structure that influences water movement and distribution of solar radiation. Fine-scale moisture variation is of particular relevance in humid forests managed with frequent prescribed fire where fire behavior variation is tightly linked to differential fire effects. Results of a three-tiered experiment combining laboratory and field methods demonstrated that solar radiation exerted a strong influence on fuel moisture patterns in a temperate humid pine forest. Infrared radiation more rapidly dried Quercus and Pinus litter in laboratory experiments compared with controls. Litter exposed to sunlight during small-scale outdoor experiments was significantly drier than shaded litter. Quercus litter was wetter than Pinus on mornings, but dried more rapidly, becoming drier than Pinus litter by mid-day when exposed to sunlight. Field observations validated small-scale outdoor and laboratory results but also revealed the influence of fuel position: elevated litter was wetter than ground-level litter at peak burning time. Results provide insight into how overstory structure and composition may influence fine-scale heterogeneity of surface moisture dynamics and fire behavior.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Ecology,Forestry,Global and Planetary Change

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