In forests adapted to infrequent (> 100-year) stand-replacing fires, novel short-interval (< 30- year) fires burn young forests before they recover from previous burns. Postfire tree regeneration is reduced, plant communities shift, soils are hotter and drier, but effects on biogeochemical cycling are unresolved. We asked how postfire nitrogen (N) stocks, N availability and N fixation varied in lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta var. latifolia) forests burned at long and short intervals in Grand Teton National Park (Wyoming, USA). In 2021 and 2022, we sampled 0.25-ha plots that burned as long-interval (> 130-year) stand-replacing fire in 2000 (n = 3) or 2016 (n = 3) and nearby plots of shortinterval (16-year) fire that burned as stand-replacing fire in both years (n = 6 ‘reburns’). Five years postfire, aboveground N stocks were 31% lower in short- versus long-interval fire (77 vs. 109 kg N ha-1, respectively) and 76% lower than 21-year-old stands that did not reburn (323 kg N ha-1). However, soil total N averaged 1,072 kg N ha-1 and dominated ecosystem N stocks, which averaged 1,235 kg N ha-1 and did not vary among burn categories. Annual resinsorbed nitrate was highest in reburns and positively correlated with understory species richness and biomass. Lupinus argenteus was sparse, and asymbiotic N fixation rates were modest in all plots (< 0.1 kg N ha-1 y-1). Although ecosystem N stocks were unaffected, high-severity short-interval fire reduced and repartitioned aboveground N stocks and increased N availability. These shifts in N pools and fluxes suggest reburns can markedly alter N cycling in subalpine forests.
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This content will become publicly available on February 7, 2026
Rates and controls of nitrogen fixation in postfire lodgepole pine forests
Abstract Severe, stand‐replacing wildfire substantially depletes nitrogen (N) stocks in subalpine conifer forests, potentially exacerbating N limitation of net primary productivity in many forested regions where fire frequency is increasing. In lodgepole pine (Pinus contortavar.latifolia) forests in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (GYE), long‐term data show surface soil and biomass N stocks are replenished during the first few decades following wildfire, but the source(s) of that N are unclear. We measured acetylene reduction rates in multiple cryptic niches (i.e., lichen, moss, pine litter, dead wood, and mineral soil) in 34‐year‐old lodgepole pine stands in the GYE to explore the rates, temporal patterns, and climate controls on cryptic N fixation. Acetylene reduction rates were highest in late May (0.376 nmol C2H4g−1 h−1) when moisture availability was high compared with early August and mid‐October when moisture was relatively low (0.112 and 0.002 nmol C2H4g−1 h−1, respectively). We observed modest rates of nitrogenase activity in a few niches following a mid‐summer rain event, suggesting that moisture is an important factor regulating field‐based N fixation rates. In a laboratory experiment, moss responded more strongly to temperature and moisture variation than all other niches. Acetylene reduction rates in dead wood increased with temperature but not moisture content. No other niches showed clear responses to either moisture or temperature manipulation. Together, the field and laboratory results suggest that frequent asynchrony between favorable temperature and moisture conditions may limit N fixation rates in the field. Overall, total annual cryptic N fixation inputs (mean: 0.26; range: 0.07–2.9 kg N ha−1year−1) represented <10% of the postfire biomass and surface soil N accumulation in the same stands (39.4 kg N ha−1year−1), pointing to a still unknown source of ecosystem N following fire.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2027261
- PAR ID:
- 10575895
- Publisher / Repository:
- Wiley Blackwell (John Wiley & Sons)
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Ecology
- Volume:
- 106
- Issue:
- 2
- ISSN:
- 0012-9658
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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