6533b873fe1ef96bd12d4cf3

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Integrating fire-scar, charcoal and fungal spore data to study fire events in the boreal forest of northern Europe

Lasse HolmströmHeikki SeppäTimo KuuluvainenMariusz GałkaJanis LiepinsTuomas AakalaLeena PasanenLiisa IlvonenLiisa IlvonenNormunds StivrinsNormunds StivrinsNormunds StivrinsHelena R. DisbreyHarri Vasander

subject

DYNAMICS010506 paleontologyArcheologyPeat010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesPEATLONG-TERM HISTORYnon-pollen palynomorphs01 natural sciencesRussiaTREE-RING RECORDSBOGHOLOCENEEcosystemFire ecologyCharcoalBogFinland1172 Environmental sciences0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface ProcessesGlobal and Planetary Changegeography4112 Forestrygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologyTaigaPaleontologyForestry15. Life on landPICEA-ABIESTAIGA FORESTNeurosporatree ringsDisturbance (ecology)13. Climate actionvisual_artforest hollowvisual_art.visual_art_mediumEnvironmental scienceWoody plant

description

Fire is a major disturbance agent in the boreal forest, influencing many current and future ecosystem conditions and services. Surprisingly few studies have attempted to improve the accuracy of fire-event reconstructions even though the estimates of the occurrence of past fires may be biased, influencing the reliability of the models employing those data (e.g. C stock, cycle). This study aimed to demonstrate how three types of fire proxies – fire scars from tree rings, sedimentary charcoal and, for the first time in this context, fungal spores of Neurospora – can be integrated to achieve a better understanding of past fire dynamics. By studying charcoal and Neurospora from sediment cores from forest hollows, and the fire scars from tree rings in their surroundings in the southern Fennoscandian and western Russian boreal forest, we produced composite fire-event data sets and fire-event frequencies, and estimated fire return intervals. Our estimates show that the fire return interval varied between 126 and 237 years during the last 11,000 years. The highest fire frequency during the 18th–19th century can be associated with the anthropogenic influence. Importantly, statistical tests revealed a positive relationship between other fire event indicators and Neurospora occurrence allowing us to pinpoint past fire events at times when the sedimentary charcoal was absent, but Neurospora were abundant. We demonstrated how fire proxies with different temporal resolution can be linked, providing potential improvements in the reliability of fire history reconstructions from multiple proxies.

10.1177/0959683619854524http://hdl.handle.net/10138/316030