Sustained Biogeochemical Impacts of Wildfire in a Mountain Lake Catchment

Wild and prescribed fires can cause severe deterioration in water quality, including increases in sediment, nutrients and dissolved organic carbon (DOC). Due to the unpredictability of wildfires, few studies have been able to employ before-after, control-intervention experimental designs, or to eval...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ecosystems (New York) 2017-06, Vol.20 (4), p.813-829
Hauptverfasser: Evans, C. D., Malcolm, I. A., Shilland, E. M., Rose, N. L., Turner, S. D., Crilly, A., Norris, D., Granath, G., Monteith, D. T.
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container_end_page 829
container_issue 4
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container_title Ecosystems (New York)
container_volume 20
creator Evans, C. D.
Malcolm, I. A.
Shilland, E. M.
Rose, N. L.
Turner, S. D.
Crilly, A.
Norris, D.
Granath, G.
Monteith, D. T.
description Wild and prescribed fires can cause severe deterioration in water quality, including increases in sediment, nutrients and dissolved organic carbon (DOC). Due to the unpredictability of wildfires, few studies have been able to employ before-after, control-intervention experimental designs, or to evaluate fire-induced water-quality changes in the context of long-term datasets. Here, we present data from a lake draining a moorland catchment in the United Kingdom, part of a 22-site, 25 year monitoring network, which experienced a major wildfire in 2011. The main water-quality response was a large, sustained increase in nitrate concentrations, sufficient to raise acidity and aluminium concentrations, effectively reversing over a decade of recovery from the effects of acid deposition. Concurrently, we observed a clear reduction in DOC concentrations, contrasting with prescribed fire studies from similar ecosystems (none based on before-after studies) that have suggested that burning causes DOC to increase. However, data from a downstream water supply reservoir do suggest a fire-induced change in DOC quality towards more soil-derived aromatic organic compounds, and lake sediment data suggest a large increase in particulate organic carbon. We conclude that the biogeochemical responses to wildfire in our moorland catchment were broadly similar to those observed in forest ecosystems elsewhere, but that historically high nitrogen deposition has made the ecosystem particularly susceptible to nitrate leaching and (re-) acidification. The observed reduction in DOC concentrations casts some doubt on the widely held view that prescribed burning in moorland systems has contributed to long-term DOC increases.
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subjects Acid deposition
Acidification
Acidity
Aluminum
Aromatic compounds
Biogeochemistry
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Burning
Casts
Controlled burning
Deposition
Dissolved organic carbon
Drainage
Ecology
Ecosystems
Ekologi
Environmental Management
Forest & brush fires
Forest ecosystems
Geoecology/Natural Processes
Hydrology/Water Resources
Lake catchments
Lake sediments
Lakes
Leaching
Life Sciences
Moorland
Mountain lakes
Mountains
Nitrates
Nutrients
Organic compounds
Organic soils
Original Articles
Particulate organic carbon
Plant Sciences
Pollutant deposition
Prescribed burning
Prescribed fire
Quality
Reduction
Reservoirs
Sediments (Geology)
Stability
Sustainability
Terrestrial ecosystems
Water quality
Water supply
Wildfires
Zoology
title Sustained Biogeochemical Impacts of Wildfire in a Mountain Lake Catchment
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