Publication | Open Access
Spatiotemporal Controls on the Delivery of Dissolved Organic Matter to Streams Following a Wildfire
31
Citations
62
References
2022
Year
Organic GeochemistryBiogeochemistryEngineeringFire DynamicOrganic MatterBurned Area MappingWater QualityFire ResearchForest MeteorologySpatiotemporal ControlsNutrient FluxesDrier ClimateDissolved Organic MatterWildfire SmokeHydrologyFire ModelingClimate Change
Abstract Warmer and drier climate has contributed to increased occurrence of large, high severity wildfires in the Pacific Northwest, drawing concerns for water quality and ecosystem recovery. While nutrient fluxes generally increase post‐fire, the composition of organic matter (OM) transported to streams immediately following a fire is poorly constrained, yet can play an integral role in downstream water quality and biogeochemistry. Here, we quantified the spatiotemporal patterns of dissolved OM (DOM) chemistry for five streams burned by wildfires in Oregon, USA in 2020. We sampled over a 24 hr storm event 1 month after the fire revealing DOM dynamics were temporally variable, but spatially linked with burn severity. Specifically, nitrogen and aromatic character of DOM increased in streams burned at greater severity. Our results suggest spatially distinct gradients of burn severity impact DOM dynamics immediately following fire activity and highlight a key gap in our knowledge of post‐fire DOM transport to streams.
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