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Chinese Journal of Applied Ecology ›› 2016, Vol. 27 ›› Issue (5): 1359-1367.doi: 10.13287/j.1001-9332.201605.030

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C:N:P stoichiometry characteristics of litter and soil of forests in Great Xing’an Mountains with different fire years.

YANG Xin-fang1,2, BAO Xue-lian1*, HU Guo-qing1,2, SHAO Shuai1,2, ZHOU Feng1,2, YE Jia-shu1, XIE Hong-tu1, LIANG Chao1   

  1. 1Institute of Applied Ecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shenyang 110164, China;
    2University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China
  • Received:2015-10-29 Online:2016-05-18 Published:2016-05-18

Abstract: We investigated the fire impacts on nutrients in litter and soil, and their C:N:P stoichio-metry in forests of Great Xing’an Mountains. The studied sites differed in their burning year (post-fire 4, 14, 40, 70 years and unburned within 120 years) and had different topographic locations (sloped land and flat land). The results showed that there were significant differences in stoichio-metry characteristics of C, N, P for both litter and soil with different burning years. No significant fluctuation was observed for the litter C content, while the contents of litter N and P increased with the increasing post-fire recovery years. In specific, we found the contents of litter N and P decreased at post-fire 4 and 14 years and nearly recovered to the control level at 40 years after fire. Additionally, C:N and C:P ratios of litter decreased, but N:P ratio of litter increased following post-fire recovery time. The contents of C, N, P and their ratios (C:N, C:P and N:P) in soil decreased with soil depth. Soil C content exhibited an increasing trend following post-fire recovery time and was significantly higher than the control at post-fire 70 years in sloped land, but no significant difference in the flat land. Significant interactive effects between fire history and slope were observed in soil P content and C:P ratio. Soil P content was higher than the control at post-fire 4 years in sloped land, but was higher than the control at post-fire 40 years in flat land. The C:P ratio recovered to the control level at post-fire 14 years in sloped land, and there was no significant diffe-rence in flat land. Redundancy analysis showed that slope effect played a more vital role than fire history effect in soil organic layer, while fire history effect was the most important factor for the varia-tion of soil nutrients in soil mineral layer. In our study, nutrients of litter and soil were lower than the control level at post-fire 4 and 14 years. The quality of litter and soil was improved with accele-rated plant growth and litter decomposition following post-fire recovery time and recovered to the pre-fire level at post-fire 40 years, reaching a steady status.