Technology
Forest Microbes Found To Survive & Multiply In Megafires: Research
New research from the University of California (UC), Riverside shows that the fungi and bacteria that survived the redwood tanoak forest megafires were microbial ‘cousins’ that often increased in abundance after ‘feeling the flames’.
Fires of unprecedented size and intensity, called megafires, are becoming increasingly common. In the West, climate change is causing rising temperatures and earlier snowmelt, extending the dry season when forests are most vulnerable to burning.
Though some ecosystems are adapted for less intense fires, little is known about how plants or their associated soil microbiomes respond to megafires, particularly in California’s charismatic redwood tanoak forests.
The UCR team is contributing to this understanding with a paper in the journal Molecular Ecology.
In addition to examining megafire effects on redwood tanoak forest microbes, the study is unusual for another reason. Soil samples were pulled from the same plots of land both before and immediately after the 2016 Soberanes fire in Monterey County on the Pacific coast in the US state of California.
The team was not surprised to find that the Soberanes fire had a massive impact on bacterial and fungal communities, with as much as a 70 per cent decline in the number of microbe species. They were surprised that some yeast and bacteria not only survived the fire but increased in abundance.
Bacteria that increased included Actinobacteria, which are responsible for helping plant material decompose. The team also found an increase in Firmicutes, known for promoting plant growth, helping control plant pathogens, and remediating heavy metals in soil.
In the fungal category, the team found a massive increase in heat resistant Basidioascus yeast, which is able to degrade different components in wood, including lignin, the tough part of plant cell walls that gives them structure and protects them from insect attacks.
Perhaps the team’s most significant finding is that fungi and bacteria – both those that survived the megafire and those that didn’t – appear to be genetically related to one another.
In general, little is known about fungi and the full extent of their effects on the environment. It is imperative that studies like these continue to reveal the ways they can help the environment recover from fires.
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