Wetland fringe areas in prairie agricultural landscapes may be subjected to burning of vegetation in autumn followed by cultivation in spring. The objective of this study was to examine the greenhouse gas (CO 2 , N 2 O and CH 4 ) emissions and plant nutrient (NO 3 , PO 4 and SO 4 ) supplies in wetland fringe soils as affected by simulated burning + cultivation, at field capacity and saturation moisture content. Using undisturbed soil cores collected from grassed wetland fringes at four sites in southern Saskatchewan, the impacts were examined over a 20-day period. The burning + cultivation treatment generally reduced CO 2 emissions, tended to increase NO 3 -N availability, and had no consistent effect on N 2 O emissions, or PO 4 -P and SO 4 -S supply. Production of CH 4 occurred only at one site, and only under saturated conditions. Compared to field capacity, saturation reduced CO 2 emissions and NO 3 -N supply, tended to increase PO 4 -P availability, and had no consistent effect on N 2 O emissions and SO 4 -S. The CO 2 emissions and SO 4 -S were greater for soil cores with higher organic matter and salinity, respectively. The N 2 O emissions were only occasionally related to soil NO 3 -N supply rate.