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    • Journal of Range Management, Volume 50 (1997)
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    Hydrologic characteristics of vegetation types as affected by prescribed burning

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    Author
    Hester, J. W.
    Thurow, T. L.
    Taylor, C. A.
    Issue Date
    1997-03-01
    Keywords
    bunchgrass
    shortgrasses
    Aristida
    soil aggregates
    Juniperus ashei
    soil organic matter
    water yield
    Quercus virginiana
    woodland grasslands
    runoff
    prescribed burning
    sheep
    goats
    Texas
    sediment yield
    plant litter
    rangelands
    grazing
    infiltration
    grasses
    bulk density
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    Citation
    Hester, J. W., Thurow, T. L., & Taylor, C. A. (1997). Hydrologic characteristics of vegetation types as affected by prescribed burning. Journal of Range Management, 50(2), 199-204.
    Publisher
    Society for Range Management
    Journal
    Journal of Range Management
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10150/644116
    DOI
    10.2307/4002381
    Additional Links
    https://rangelands.org/
    Abstract
    The objective of this study was to determine how rangeland hydrology of oak, juniper, bunchgrass and shortgrass vegetation types is altered by fire. The research was conducted at the Sonora Agricultural Experiment Station on the Edwards Plateau, Texas. Infiltration rate and interrill erosion were measured using a drip-type rainfall simulator. Terminal infiltration rates of unburned areas were significantly greater on sites dominated by oak (Quercus virginiana Mill.) (200 mm hour-1) or juniper (Juniperus ashei Buchh.) (183 mm hour-1) than on sites dominated by bunch-grass (146 mm hour-1) or shortgrass (105 mm hour-1). Terminal infiltration rates on burned areas were significantly reduced on sites dominated by bunchgrass (110 mm hour-1), shortgrass (76 mm hour-1), and on oak sites that were cut and burned (129 mm hour-1). Soil organic matter content (r = .61), total organic cover (r = .59), and aggregate stability (r = .53) were the variables most strongly correlated with infiltration rate. Measured soil structure properties were not altered by fire, therefore, differences in infiltration rate between unburned and burned treatments were attributable to variations in the amount of cover. The terminal infiltration rate of cut and burned juniper sites (162 mm hour-1) was not changed significantly after the fire because the associated good soil structure properties allowed rapid infiltration even after cover was removed. Good soil structure properties were also present on the oak sites, but the infiltration rate significantly decreased as a result of the temporary hydrophobic nature of the soil on this site after burning. Prior to burning, interrill erosion was much lower under the tree sites (oak = 2 kg ha-1; juniper = 34 kg ha-1) than on bunchgrass (300 kg ha-1) or shortgrass (1,299 kg ha-1) sites. After burning, interrill erosion significantly increased for all vegetation types (shortgrass = 5,766 kg ha-1; bunchgrass = 4,463 kg ha-1; oak = 4,500 kg ha-1; juniper = 1,926 kg ha-1). Total organic cover (r = -.74) and bulk density at 0-30 mm (r = .46) were most strongly correlated with interrill erosion.
    Type
    text
    Article
    Language
    en
    ISSN
    0022-409X
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.2307/4002381
    Scopus Count
    Collections
    Journal of Range Management, Volume 50, Number 2 (March 1997)

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