4.4 Article

Short-Term Effects of Wildfire Ash on Water Quality Parameters: A Laboratory Approach

Journal

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00128-021-03220-9

Keywords

Cerrado biome; Fire; Ash; Water; Physicochemical parameters

Funding

  1. Brazilian Council of Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq) [478637/2012-8]
  2. PIBIC/UniCEUB

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This study examined the impact of ash from large-scale wildfires in Brazilian tropical savannahs on water parameters, discovering that water-extractable elements from ash significantly alter water quality parameters, leading to elevated total dissolved solids and conductivity levels, increased pH, and decreased dissolved oxygen concentration.
Climate change coupled with inappropriate burning practices has increased large-scale wildfires in Brazilian tropical savannahs (Cerrado). Considering that the effects of ash from wildfires on water parameters are scarcely known in tropical savannahs, this study investigated the chemical changes caused by ash in the soft water, commonly used for bioassays. To this end, ash samples were collected immediately following a fire in a Cerrado area (Federal District, Brazil) and put into water (1:10 ash:soft-water m/v) to check physical parameters under laboratory conditions. Major water-extractable elements (K+, SO42-, Ca-,(2+) PO43-, Na+, Mg2+) from ash strongly altered water quality parameters: elevated total dissolved solids and conductivity levels as well as an increase in pH and decrease in dissolved oxygen concentration were reported over the course of the experiment (15 days) compared to control conditions. Our results point out relevant solubilized compounds from ashes which may potentially impact water quality in post-fire scenarios.

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