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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/10127
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Title: | Effects of forest type and stream size on volume and distribution of stream wood: legacies of wildfire in Euro-Mediterranean context |
Authors: | Vaz, Pedro Warren, Dana Merten, Eric Robbinson, Christofer Pinto, Paulo Rego, Francisco |
Keywords: | wildfire wood distribution forest management disturbance intermittent streams |
Issue Date: | 2013 |
Publisher: | Society for Freshwater Science |
Citation: | Freshwater Science 32, 126-141 (2013) |
Abstract: | Downed wood pieces are key links between terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. They promote
organic matter retention, create habitat, and potentially increase stream productivity. The stock of downed
wood in a river system is a product of the interaction between wood supply, transport, in situ losses, and
retention characteristics of the system. Fire and forest management are important disturbances that
influence the amount and organization of stream wood with boom-and-bust periods of recruitment and
fluvial transport processes. We examined 1st- through 3rd-order Portuguese streams flowing through 3
common silvicultural systems in southern Europe: forests of cork oak, eucalyptus, and maritime pine. Our
data set included 1483 pieces of wood in 27 streams, all of which had experienced extensive wildfires
within the previous 6 y. We used binned neighbor-k analysis to assess wood organization (segregated,
random, or aggregated). We then used linear mixed-effects modeling to evaluate the effects of stream
order, forest type, and their interaction on wood volume and organization. The best predictor of wood
volume and organization was the interaction between forest type and stream order. Most wood pieces
were burned and organization was low, suggesting that arrangement of wood was largely a product of
input dynamics rather than transport processes at this time. Potential drivers of across-system variability
included vegetation obstructions, wood length:channel width ratios, management actions, and effects of
fire. Climate models predict more droughts in the Euro-Mediterranean region in the future, with
implications for wood volume, transport, and function as terrestrial vegetation invades intermittent stream
channels and plant communities shift from managed forests to shrublands with few trees. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10174/10127 |
Type: | article |
Appears in Collections: | BIO - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica
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