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Published in Soil Sci Soc Am J 43:504-509 (1979)
© 1979 Soil Science Society of America
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
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Effects of Burning on Chaparral Soils: I. Soil Nitrogen1

Leonard F. DeBano, Gary E. Eberlein and Paul H. Dunn2

ABSTRACT

Undisturbed moist or dry soil slabs collected from beneath chaparral plants were burned at different intensities in the laboratory. Inorganic and organic nitrogen levels were measured before and after burning. An intense burn over dry soil slabs decreased KCl-extractable NH4+-N in the litter but increased it in the underlying soil. In contrast, NO3--N was decreased in both soil and litter during an intense burn over dry soil. Little change in NO3-- and NH4+-N occurred when litter and soil were moist. About 67% of the total N in the litter and soil was lost during the intense burn over dry soil, but less than 25% was lost when the soil and litter were moist. Amino acids were particularly sensitive to heating and were almost destroyed in dry litter during the intense burn. Almost 75% of the hexosamines in the litter and soil were also destroyed by the intense burn over dry soil.


NOTES

1 Contribution from Pacific Southwest Forest & Range Exp. Stn., Forest Service, USDA, Berkeley, CA 94701.

2 Formerly Principal Soil Scientist, Pacific Southwest Forest & Range Exp. Stn., Glendora, Calif., now Supervisory Soil Scientist, Rocky Mountain Forest & Range Exp. Stn., Fort Collins, Colo., stationed at Tempe, Ariz.; Botanist and Microbiologist, respectively.

Received for publication September 25, 1978. Accepted for publication February 22, 1979.







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