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Arturo J.P. Granged

Departamento de Física Aplicada I
ETSIA
Ctra. de Utrera, km 1
41013, Sevilla, Spain
granged@us.es
Arturo

Born in Ciudad Real, Spain (1965)
Graduated in Physics (1992)
PhD student
Profesor Titular de EU
University of Sevilla , Spain

Personal web
-MED_Soil Research Group
-FUEGORED, Spanish Network for the Effects of Fire on Soils
-SISIUS

Research lines:
-Soil water repellency
-Effects of wildfires on soils
-Soil hydrology
-Soil erosion
-Soils and geomorphology

Journal articles

2010
Lorena M Zavala, Arturo J P Granged, Antonio Jordán, Gema Bárcenas-Moreno (2010)  Effect of burning temperature on water repellency and aggregate stability in forest soils under laboratory conditions   Geoderma  
Abstract: Soil water repellency is usually modified after wildfires by the combustion of soil organic matter and plant residues, and is considered to be the cause of important changes in the hydrological response of burned soils. In this research, the interactions between burning temperature, soil water content, water repellency and stability of aggregates have been studied. Samples collected from soils under eucalyptus forest in Spain, Mexico, and Australia were treated at 100-150, 200-250, and 400-450 ºC under dry and moist conditions in the laboratory, and temperature profiles and changes in water repellency were analyzed using the water drop penetration time test and the contact angle method. In order to study the effects of burning temperature on aggregate stability, undisturbed top soil samples (0-5 cm depth) were collected at five soil plots at Sierra de Aracena Natural Park (SW Spain) and treated at different temperatures ranging between 50 and 400 ºC. The results showed that soil water repellency did not change significantly with respect to unheated control samples at temperatures between 100-150 oC, but decreased considerably between 250-300 ºC and practically disappeared after heating to 400-450 oC. Soil moisture induced a decrease of water repellency in samples treated at 100-150 oC and 250-300 ºC, but its effect was negligible at higher temperatures. Laboratory heat treatments reduced soil aggregate stability, especially after exposure to temperatures above
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