Vilde L. Haukenes, Johan Asplund, Line Nybakken, Jørund Rolstad, Ken Olaf Storaunet, Mikael Ohlson. Disentangling drivers of organic layer and charcoal carbon stocks in boreal pine and spruce forests with different fire histories[J]. Forest Ecosystems, 2025, 14(1): 100334. DOI: 10.1016/j.fecs.2025.100334
Citation: Vilde L. Haukenes, Johan Asplund, Line Nybakken, Jørund Rolstad, Ken Olaf Storaunet, Mikael Ohlson. Disentangling drivers of organic layer and charcoal carbon stocks in boreal pine and spruce forests with different fire histories[J]. Forest Ecosystems, 2025, 14(1): 100334. DOI: 10.1016/j.fecs.2025.100334

Disentangling drivers of organic layer and charcoal carbon stocks in boreal pine and spruce forests with different fire histories

  • A key property of the boreal forest is that it stores huge amounts of carbon (C), especially belowground in the soil. Amounts of C stored in the uppermost organic layer of boreal forest soils vary greatly in space due to an interplay between several variables facilitating or preventing C accumulation. In this study, we split C stocks into the organic layer and charcoal C due to their difference in origin, stability, and ecological properties. We compared organic layer C and charcoal C stocks in two regions of south-central Norway (Trillemarka and Varaldskogen), characterized by Scots pine and Norway spruce forests with varying fire histories. We used structural equation modeling to investigate how vegetation composition, hydrotopography, and soil properties interplay to shape organic layer C and charcoal C stocks. Pine forests consistently contained larger organic layer C stocks than spruce forests. Charcoal stocks, in contrast, were less consistent across both forest types and study regions as pine forests had higher charcoal C stocks than spruce forests in Trillemarka, while the two forest types contained equal charcoal C stocks in Varaldskogen. Charcoal and soil organic layer C stocks increased with higher fire frequencies (number of fire events over the last 600 years), but not with a shorter time since last fire (TSF). Additionally, vegetation composition, terrain slope, and soil moisture were the most important drivers of the organic layer C stocks, while charcoal C stocks were mainly controlled by the depth of the organic layer. Also, microtopography was of importance for organic layer C and charcoal C, since depressions in the forest floor had more charcoal C than well-drained minor hills.
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