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Author
Bryner, N. P. | Walton, W. D. | Mendelssohn, I. A. | Lin, Q. | Mullin, J. V.
Title
Effects of In-Situ Burning on Coastal Wetlands: Soil Temperatures and Regrowth of Marsh Plant Species.
Coporate
National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg, MD Wetland Biogeochemistry Institute, Baton Rouge, LA Minerals Management Service, Herndon, VA
Book or Conf
Prevention, Preparedness, Response and Restoration: Perspectives for a Cleaner Environment. International Oil Spill Conference. IOSC 2003. Proceedings. April 6-11, 2003, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, 115-121 p., 2003
Keywords
oil spills | in situ burning | soil temperatures | plants (botany) | experiments | uncertainty | thermal energy | thermal stresses
Identifiers
post-burn regrowth and recovery of marsh plants; undertainty in experimental data
Abstract
Twenty-one full-scale in-situ burn experiments examined soil temperatures which marsh plants experience during in-situ burning. Two hundred sixty four plant sods, including Spartina alteniflora, Spartina patens, Distichlis spicata, and Sagittaria lancfolia plants, were exposed in a 6 m diameter tank to burning diesel fuel or crude oil for intervals ranging from 400 s to 1400 s. Individual sods were instrumented with thermocouples to track soil temperatures throughout each burn. After the burns, the sods were returned to the greenhouse where plant recovery was monitored for up to a year. The water depth over the soil surface during in-situ burning was a key factor controlling plant recovery. For either 400 s or 1400 s burn exposures, soil temperatures did not exceed 50 deg C and 70 deg C for 10 cm and 2 centimeters of water overlying the soil surface, respectively. Ten and 2 centimeters of water overlying the soil surface were sufficient to protect all 3 types of marsh plants from burning impacts. In contrast, 2 cm of soil exposure to the fire during the burn resulted in high soil temperatures, with 80 deg C to 100 deg C at 0 cm to 0.5 cm below the soil surface. The effect of thermal stress on plant survival differed with species as 2 cm of soil exposure during burning impeded the post-burn recovery of the salt marsh grass, S. altemiflora, and fresh marsh species, S. lancuolia. However, 2 cm of soil exposure during in-situ burning did not detrimentally affect the post-burn recovery of the brackish marsh grasses, S. patens and D. spicata. For plants positioned 10 cm above the water level, peak surface soil temperatures ranged from 350 deg C to 800 deg C for 400 s and 1400 s burns, respectively. Thermal stress almost completely inhibited the post-burn recovery of S. altemiflora in this water level treatment.