Experimental production of charcoal morphologies to discriminate fuel source and fire type: an example from Siberian taiga
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Published:2021-06-28
Issue:12
Volume:18
Page:3805-3821
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ISSN:1726-4189
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Container-title:Biogeosciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Biogeosciences
Abstract
Abstract. The analysis of charcoal fragments in peat and lake sediments is the most
widely used approach to reconstruct past biomass burning. With a few
exceptions, this method typically relies on the quantification of the total
charcoal content of the sediment. To enhance charcoal analyses for the
reconstruction of past fire regimes and make the method more relevant to
studies of both plant evolution and fire management, the extraction of more
information from charcoal particles is critical. Here, I used a muffle oven
to burn seven fuel types comprising 17 species from boreal Siberia (near
Teguldet village), which are also commonly found in the Northern Hemisphere,
and built on published schemes to develop morphometric and finer diagnostic
classifications of the experimentally charred particles. I then combined
these results with those from fossil charcoal from a peat core taken from
the same location (Ulukh-Chayakh mire) in order to demonstrate the relevance of
these experiments to the fossil charcoal records. Results show that
graminoids, Sphagnum, and wood (trunk) lose the most mass at low burn temperatures
(<300 ∘C), whereas heathland shrub leaves, brown moss,
and ferns lose the most mass at high burn temperatures. This suggests that species with low
mass retention in high-temperature fires are likely to be under-represented
in the fossil charcoal record. The charcoal particle aspect ratio appeared
to be the strongest indicator of the fuel type burnt. Graminoid charcoal
particles are the most elongate (6.7–11.5), with a threshold above 6 that may be
indicative of wetland graminoids; leaves are the shortest and bulkiest
(2.1–3.5); and twigs and wood are intermediate (2.0–5.2). Further, the use
of fine diagnostic features was more successful in separating wood,
graminoids, and leaves, but it was difficult to further differentiate these
fuel types due to overlapping features. High-aspect-ratio particles,
dominated by graminoid and Sphagnum morphologies, may be robust indicators of low-temperature surface fires, whereas abundant wood and leaf morphologies as well as
low-aspect-ratio particles are indicative of higher-temperature fires.
However, the overlapping morphologies of leaves and wood from trees and
shrubs make it hard to distinguish between high-intensity surface fires,
combusting living shrubs and dead wood and leaves, and high-intensity crown
fires that have burnt living trees. Distinct particle shape may also
influence charcoal transportation, with elongated particles (graminoids)
potentially having a more heterogeneous distribution and being deposited
farther away from the origin of fire than the rounder, polygonal leaf
particles. Despite these limitations, the combined use of charred-particle
aspect ratios and fuel morphotypes can aid in the more robust interpretation of
fuel source and fire-type changes. Lastly, I highlight the further
investigations needed to refine the histories of past wildfires.
Funder
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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