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Type: Journal Article
Author(s): Ian M. McCullough; Jennifer A. Brentrup; Tyler Wagner; Jean-François Lapierre; Jerald Henneck; Andrea M. Paul; Mathilde Belair; Max A. Moritz; Christopher T. Filstrup
Publication Date: 2023

Despite increasing wildfires, few studies have investigated seasonal water quality responses to wildfire characteristics (e.g., burn severity) across a large number of lakes. We monitored 30 total lakes (15 burned, 15 control) monthly following the Greenwood Fire in Minnesota, USA, a lake-rich region with historically prevalent wildfire. We found increases in median concentrations of total nitrogen (68%), total phosphorus (70%), dissolved organic carbon (127%), total suspended solids (71%), and reduced water clarity (48%) and pH (0.45) in burned lakes. Post-wildfire responses in drainage lakes were often persistent or cumulative throughout the open-water season, compared to isolated lakes. Total phosphorus (TP) increased linearly with watershed high-severity burns, and shoreline high-severity burns explained more variation in TP than lake morphometry and watershed variables. Post-wildfire chlorophyll-a responses were nonsignificant and inconsistent, possibly due to light limitation. Our results suggest that increasing wildfires have significant potential to affect water quality of inland lakes.

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Citation: McCullough, Ian M.; Brentrup, Jennifer A.; Wagner, Tyler; Lapierre, Jean-Francois; Henneck, Jerald; Paul, Andrea M.;x Belair, Mathilde; Moritz, Max. A.; Filstrup, Christopher T. 2023. Fire characteristics and hydrologic connectivity influence short-term responses of north temperate lakes to wildfire. Geophysical Research Letters 50(16):e2023GL103953.

Cataloging Information

Topics:
Regions:
Keywords:
  • fire severity
  • Greenwood Fire
  • lakes
  • Minnesota
  • water quality
Record Last Modified:
Record Maintained By: FRAMES Staff (https://www.frames.gov/contact)
FRAMES Record Number: 69206