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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/37000
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Title: | Impacts of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) straw mulch on post-fire soil erosion and vegetation dynamics in a burned strawberry tree plantation. |
Authors: | González-Pelayo, Oscar Prats, Sergio Vieira, A.M.D. Vieira, Diana Maia, Paula Keizer, Jacob |
Keywords: | rural fire arbutus unedo |
Issue Date: | 12-Aug-2023 |
Publisher: | Elsevier |
Citation: | Gonzalez-Pelayo O., Prats SA., Vieira A.M.D., Vieira D.C.S., Maia P. Keizer J.J. (2023). Impacts of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) straw mulch on post-fire soil erosion and vegetation dynamics in a burned strawberry tree plantation. Ecological Engineering 195, 107074. DOI: 10.1016/j.ecoleng.2023.107074 |
Abstract: | Rural fires are now a major societal concern across the world, especially where fire regimes have (apparently)
intensified in terms of burnt area, intensity and recurrency. Among the indirect fire effects, fire-enhanced runoff
and erosion have been an important focus of post-fire land and water management, in particular through
emergency stabilization of hillslopes using a range of erosion mitigation measures. The most widely applied and
– scientifically tested – measure is that of mulching with agricultural straw, in spite of concerns of introducing
exogenous organic material and especially seeds of non-native higher plant species, including the straw species
it- or themselves. So far, field studies in the present study region of north-central Portugal have preferred using
endogenous forest residues but these studies concerned forest types for which such residues are easily available.
The latter, however, is not the case for strawberry tree stands, so that straw mulch was selected in this study as a
cheaper alternative to eucalypt or pine residues. This - apparently, first – post-fire erosion mitigation study in a
strawberry tree (Arbutus unedo L.) stand aimed to compare post-fire sediment and organic matter losses as well as
ground vegetation recovery without and with applying barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) straw mulch at a low rate of 2
Mg ha 1. The experimental set-up involved a randomized block design with a total of six geotextile-bounded
erosion plots of 2 m by 5 m that were organized in three blocks, were installed and mulched roughly one
month after the 17-October-2017 M-fire in inland Central Portugal, and monitored at 12 irregular intervals
during the first two post-fire years. The principal findings were that: (i) especially the specific sediment losses
without mulching over the first post-fire year were notably higher than those reported by the prior field studies in
the region, in eucalypt and maritime pine plantations; and that the - low - mulching rate: (ii) was extremely
effective in reducing these first-post-fire-year losses; but (iii) did not result in changes in the cover or floristic
composition of the ground vegetation cover that were noteworthy and longer-lived than the first post-fire year. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10174/37000 |
Type: | article |
Appears in Collections: | MED - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica
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