1977
DOI: 10.2307/3897302
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Effects of Fire, Ash, and Litter on Soil Nitrate, Temperature, Moisture and Tobosagrass Production in the Rolling Plains

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Cited by 83 publications
(63 citation statements)
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“…Increased amounts of vegetation and litter forestall rising soil temperatures, thereby delaying plant phenological development and lowering early season mineralization rates (Sharrow and Wright 1977;Kauffman et al 1983). This factor may explain the lower lysimeter-extractable SO 4 À2 on the grazing-excluded treatment.…”
Section: à2mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Increased amounts of vegetation and litter forestall rising soil temperatures, thereby delaying plant phenological development and lowering early season mineralization rates (Sharrow and Wright 1977;Kauffman et al 1983). This factor may explain the lower lysimeter-extractable SO 4 À2 on the grazing-excluded treatment.…”
Section: à2mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fire's combustion process releases some of the nitrogen sequestered in the fuels and makes it available as ammonium-N to the plants as it condenses on lower soil layers, even though a large portion of nitrogen is volatilized and lost to the atmosphere depending on amount of combusted organic matter (Grier 1975;Little and Ohmann 1988;Pehl and others 1986;Schoch and Binkley 1986). Nitrogen fertilization is also increased by the actions of decomposing bacteria that are stimulated with fire (Sharrow and Wright 1977). White (1994White ( , 1996 found that ground fires consumed volatile organic compounds that could inhibit decomposition.…”
Section: Soilsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…After fire, the layer of black ash and the partially burnt organic material lying on the soil surface can alter the thermal properties of the soil (Walker et al 1986), particularly where an opening in the canopy has occurred and increased solar radiation reaches the soil surface. As a consequence, a shift in the range of daily soil temperatures may occur (Sharrow and Wright 1977;Raison et al 1986), in some cases exceeding the thresholds for breaking physical seed dormancy (Auld and Bradstock 1996). This indirect fire cue may acquire special relevance after summer fires, when daily soil temperatures reach high levels and fluctuate most widely.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%