Biogeosciences (Jun 2021)

The impact of wildfire on biogeochemical fluxes and water quality in boreal catchments

  • G. Granath,
  • C. D. Evans,
  • C. D. Evans,
  • J. Strengbom,
  • J. Fölster,
  • A. Grelle,
  • J. Strömqvist,
  • S. J. Köhler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-18-3243-2021
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18
pp. 3243 – 3261

Abstract

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Wildfires are the major disturbance in boreal ecosystems and are of great importance for the biogeochemical cycles of carbon (C) and nutrients. However, these fire-induced impacts are hard to quantify and are rarely assessed together at an ecosystem level incorporating both aquatic and terrestrial environments. Following a wildfire in Sweden in an area with ongoing monitoring, we conducted a pre-fire (9 years) and post-fire (4 years) multi-catchment investigation of element losses (combustion and leaching) and impacts on water quality. Direct C and nitrogen (N) losses through combustion were ca. 4500 and 100 g m−2, respectively. Net CO2 loss associated with soil and biomass respiration was ∼ 150 g C m−2 during the first year, but the ecosystem started to show net CO2 uptake in June 3 years post-fire. Aquatic C and N losses the first 12 months post-fire were 7 and 0.6 g m−2, respectively. Hence, soil respiration comprised a non-negligible part of the post-fire C loss, whereas aquatic C losses were minor and did not increase post-fire. However, other elements (e.g. Ca, S) exhibited ecologically relevant increases in fluvial export and concentration with large peaks in the immediate post-fire period. The temporal dynamics of stream concentrations (Ca2+, Mg2+, K+ ,SO4-2, Cl− ,NH4+, total organic N) suggest the presence of faster- and slower-release nutrient pools with half-lives of around 2 weeks and 4 months which we attribute to physicochemically and biologically mediated mobilization processes, respectively. Three years after the fire, it appears that dissolved fluxes of nutrients have largely returned to pre-fire conditions, but there is still net release of CO2.