Week of October 12, 2008 to October 18, 2008

Wildfires Pack A One-Two Punch On Forest Soil

For decades, scientists and resource managers have known that wildfires affect forest soils, evidenced, in part, by the erosion that often occurs after a fire kills vegetation and disrupts soil structure. But, the lack of detailed knowledge of forest soils before they are burned by wildfire has hampered efforts to understand fire’s effects on soil fertility and forest ecology.

A new study led by the Pacific Northwest (PNW) Research Station addresses
this critical information gap and represents the first direct evidence of
the toll wildfire can take on forest soil layers. It draws on data from the
2002 Biscuit Fire, which scorched some 500,000 acres in southwest Oregon,
including half of a pre-existing study’s experimental plots, which had been
studied extensively before the fire. The result was a serendipitous and
unprecedented opportunity to directly examine how wildfire changes soil by
sampling soils before and after a wildfire. The study appears in the
November issue of the Canadian Journal of Forest Research.

“Losing our experiment in the fire was hard, but the opportunity to better
understand fire as a dominant ecosystem process has been very exciting,”
said Bernard Bormann, a research forest ecologist with PNW Research Station
and the study’s lead investigator. “This study, covering over 300 acres,
provided nearly 400 soil sampling points as well as extensive tree and
understory plots to use in our analysis.”

Bormann—along with study co-author and Western Washington University
professor Peter Homann and colleagues from the PNW Research Station and
Oregon State University— conducted chemical analyses on soil samples
collected before and after the fire. They found that the combustion of the
organic layer at the soil’s surface, including woody debris, caused
intense, 1,300 °F-plus temperatures, which, in turn, displaced considerable
amounts of carbon and nitrogen from the underlying mineral soil layer and
left mostly ash behind. What was more surprising to the researchers was how
these organic materials may have been lost. Some carbon and nitrogen were
lost as gases—consisting mostly of carbon dioxide, nitrogen dioxide, and
water vapor—and some in an inch of fine mineral-soil particles, which
disappeared and left behind a crust of rocks.

“Altogether, we documented losses of more than 10 tons per acre of carbon
and between 450 to 620 pounds per acre of nitrogen,” Bormann said. “The
loss of topsoil and combustion of organic materials together led to losses
that are higher than most previous estimates.”

The loss of topsoil and carbon from soil can negatively affect a range of
processes, Bormann said, including nutrient retention and water
infiltration. In the absence of special nitrogen-fixing plants, which are
capable of converting atmospheric nitrogen into nitrogen compounds for
growth, losses of nitrogen in the order of what he and his colleagues
documented would require at least a century to be reversed.

Equally disconcerting is the role these released organic materials might
have on the atmosphere, especially in the face of a warming climate. The
burning of soil by wildfire may contribute to global warming, in the short
term, by releasing carbon as a greenhouse gas and, in the long term, by
reducing soil productivity through losses of organic matter and nutrients.
With less productive soils, Bormann said, a forest will not grow as quickly
nor reabsorb as much carbon as before a burn—a process critical to
mitigating the accumulation of atmospheric carbon, which traps heat in the
atmosphere and can, thus, raise temperatures.

“Our findings suggest that forest managers should carefully consider the
effects of wildfire on soils when planning to reduce fuels, suppress future
fires, and help trees and habitat recover after fire,” Bormann said.

Source: 
Pacific Northwest Research Station, U.S. Forest Service

India: Tribe Vows to Fight Mine With Axes and Arrows

One of India’s most isolated tribes, the Dongria Kondh, is preparing to stop British FTSE 100 company Vedanta from mining aluminium ore on their sacred mountain, after police and hired thugs forced protestors to dismantle a barricade over the weekend.

About 150 people had blocked the road in Orissa state on Wednesday after hearing that Vedanta intended to start survey work for a planned aluminium mine which would destroy an ecologically vital hill, and the Dongria Kondh’s most sacred site. Vedanta employees visited the blockade repeatedly, threatening the protestors. On Friday the villagers gave in and took down the barricade, but about 100 are still at the side of the road, blocking traffic when Vedanta vehicles approach.

Vedanta is majority owned by London-based Indian billionaire Anil Agarwal.

Today, Dongria Kondh from all over Niyamgiri, the hill range that would be decimated by Vedanta’s mine, are making arrows and preparing their axes to stop Vedanta reaching their sacred mountain. One Dongria man said today ‘Now our people are very angry. We have to show the Dongria Kondh power to Vedanta.’

When India’s Supreme Court gave Vedanta the green light in August to mine on Dongria land, around 40 Dongrias used tree trunks to block a road leading into their hills, and held banners reading, ‘We are Dongria Kondh. Vedanta can not take our mountain.’ [photos available]

The mountain that Vedanta wants to mine is not only the Dongria Kondh’s most sacred site, it is also integral to the entire ecosystem of the hills, enabling the numerous streams and lush forests which sustain the Dongrias to continue to thrive.

Source: 
Survival International

Amazon Tribe's Protest Shuts Down Dam Site

Indians from the Enawene Nawe tribe in the Brazilian Amazon occupied and shut down the site of a huge hydroelectric dam on Saturday, destroying equipment, in an attempt to save the river that runs through their land.

The Enawene Nawe say the 77 dams to be built on the River Juruena will pollute the water and stop the fish reaching their spawning grounds. Fish is crucial to the Enawene Nawe’s diet as they do not eat red meat. It also plays a vital part in their rituals.

‘If the fish get sick and die so will the Enawene Nawe,’ said one member of the tribe.

Companies led by the world’s largest soya producers, the Maggi family, are pushing for the construction of the dams. Soya baron Blairo Maggi is also the governor of Mato Grosso state.

The Enawene Nawe number only five hundred, and live in one village in large communal houses around a central square. They were first contacted in 1974 by Jesuit missionaries. They chose for many years to have very little interaction with the outside world, but threats to their land have led them to campaign vigorously for their rights.

Source: 
Survival International