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Soil Fungi Recover Slowly Following High-Severity Wildfires

From the Rocky Mountain Research Station:

In recent decades, wildfires in ponderosa pine forests have increased in size and severity. These wildfires can remove large, contiguous patches of mature forests, alter dominant plant communities and increase woody debris, potentially altering fungal community composition. Additionally, post-fire conditions may shift dominant fungal functional groups from plant-symbiotic ectomycorrhizal fungi to more saprotrophic fungi.

Read the full brief here!

Posted by:
Gloria Edwards
Published on:
May 7, 2020

Categories: Publication, Research Brief/SynthesisTags: ponderosa pine, Rocky Mountain Research Station, wildfire

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This regional Fire Exchange is one of 15 regional fire science exchanges sponsored by the Joint Fire Science Program (JFSP).
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