Articles | Volume 7, issue 5
https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-7-1375-2010
https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-7-1375-2010
03 May 2010
 | 03 May 2010

Soil surface CO2 flux increases with successional time in a fire scar chronosequence of Canadian boreal jack pine forest

D. R. Smith, J. D. Kaduk, H. Balzter, M. J. Wooster, G. N. Mottram, G. Hartley, T. J. Lynham, J. Studens, J. Curry, and B. J. Stocks

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Cited articles

Amiro, B. D., Todd, J. B., Wotton, B. M., Logan, K. A., Flannigan, M. D., Stocks, B. J., Mason, J. A., Martell, D. L., and Hirsch, K. G.: Direct carbon emissions from Canadian forest fires, 1959–1999, Can. J. Forest Res., 31, 512–525, 2001.
Bonan, G. B.: Forests and climate change: forcings, feedbacks, and the climate benefits of forests, Science, 320(5882), 1444–1449, 2008.
Bond-Lamberty, B., Wang, C., and Gower, S. T.: Net primary production and net ecosystem production of a boreal black spruce wildfire chronosequence, Glob. Change Biol., 10(4), 473–487, 2004.
Borken, W., Muhs, A., and Beese, F.: Application of compost in spruce forests: effects on soil respiration, basal respiration and microbial biomass, Forest Ecol. Manage., 159(1–2), 49–58, 2002.
Burke, R. A., Zepp, R. G., Tarr, M. A., Miller, W. L., and Stocks, B. J.: Effect of fire on soil-atmosphere exchange of methane and carbon dioxide in Canadian boreal forest sites, J. Geophys. Res.-Atmos., 102(D24), 29289–29300, 1997.
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