Longitudinal propagation of aquatic disturbances following the largest wildfire recorded in New Mexico, USA

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Abstract

Wildfire disturbance propagation along fluvial networks remains poorly understood. We use incident, atmospheric, and water-quality data from the largest wildfire in New Mexico’s history to quantify how this gigafire affected surface runoff processes and mobilized wildfire disturbances into fluvial networks after burning 1382 km2. Surface runoff post-fire increased compared to pre-fire conditions, and precipitation events that are frequently observed in the affected watershed (<2-year recurrence) and fell during the post-fire first rainy season resulted in uncorrelated, less frequently observed runoff events (10-year recurrence). Besides these shifts in runoff generation, the magnitude and fluctuation of daily water quality parameters and relevant ecosystem processes also shifted over multiple months, even at sites located >160 km downstream of the burn perimeter. Our findings emphasize the need to incorporate spatially resolved longitudinal sampling designs into wildfire water quality research and highlight the spatiotemporal co-dependency among atmospheric, terrestrial, and aquatic processes in defining the net outcome of wildfire disturbance propagation along impacted fluvial networks.

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Nichols, J., Joseph, E., Kaphle, A., Tunby, P., Rodríguez, L., Khandelwal, A., … González-Pinzón, R. (2024). Longitudinal propagation of aquatic disturbances following the largest wildfire recorded in New Mexico, USA. Nature Communications, 15(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-51306-9

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