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Stand-replacing wildfires alter the community structure of wood-inhabiting fungi in southwestern ponderosa pine forests of the USA

Authors :
Valerie J. Kurth
Nicholas Fransioli
Peter Z. Fulé
Catherine A. Gehring
Stephen C. Hart
Source :
Fungal Ecology. 6:192-204
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2013.

Abstract

Increases in stand-replacing wildfires in the western USA have widespread implications for ecosystem carbon (C) cycling, in part because the decomposition of trees killed by fire can be a long-term source of CO2 to the atmosphere. Knowledge of the composition and function of decay fungi communities may be important to understanding how wildfire alters C cycles. We assessed the effects of stand-replacing wildfires on the community structure of wood-inhabiting fungi along a 32-yr wildfire chronosequence. Fire was associated with low species richness for up to 4 yr and altered species composition relative to unburned forest for the length of the chronosequence. A laboratory incubation demonstrated that species varied in their capacity to decompose wood; Hypocrea lixii, an indicator of the most recent burn, caused the lowest decomposition rate. Our results show that stand-replacing wildfires have long-term effects on fungal communities, which may have

Details

ISSN :
17545048
Volume :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Fungal Ecology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........4eb9266535a2ad6a9b914d1d3228ab0b