4.7 Article

Hyper-dry conditions provide new insights into the cause of extreme floods after wildfire

Journal

CATENA
Volume 93, Issue -, Pages 58-63

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.catena.2012.01.006

Keywords

Wildfire; Unsaturated; Retention curve; Hyper-dry; Soil moisture

Funding

  1. Mendenhall Postdoctoral Fellowship Program

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A catastrophic wildfire in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains near Boulder, Colorado provided a unique opportunity to investigate soil conditions immediately after a wildfire and before alteration by rainfall. Measurements of near-surface (<6 cm) soil properties (temperature, volumetric soil-water content, 0; and matric suction, psi), rainfall, and wind velocity were started 8 days after the wildfire began. These measurements established that hyper-dry conditions (theta < similar to 0.02 cm(3) cm(-3); psi > similar to 3 x 10(5) cm) existed and provided an in-situ retention curve for these conditions. These conditions exacerbate the effects of water repellency (natural and fire-induced) and limit the effectiveness of capillarity and gravity driven infiltration into fire-affected soils. The important consequence is that given hyper-dry conditions, the critical rewetting process before the first rain is restricted to the diffusion-adsorption of water-vapor. This process typically has a time scale of days to weeks (especially when the hydrologic effects of the ash layer are included) that is longer than the typical time scale (minutes to hours) of some rainstorms, such that under hyper-dry conditions essentially no rain infiltrates. The existence of hyper-dry conditions provides insight into why, frequently during the first rain storm after a wildfire, nearly all rainfall becomes runoff causing extreme floods and debris flows. Published by Elsevier B.V.

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