4.5 Article

How do large wildfires impact sediment redistribution over multiple decades?

期刊

EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS
卷 47, 期 13, 页码 3033-3050

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/esp.5441

关键词

burn severity; land and wildfire management; long-term modelling; post-fire erosion; sediment connectivity; wildfires

资金

  1. cE3c research center [UIDB/00329/2020]
  2. Erasmus+ travel fellowship
  3. Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology [PCIF/MPG/0044/2018, CEECIND/03799/2018/C, IF/00586/2015]
  4. Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia [PCIF/MPG/0044/2018] Funding Source: FCT

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Wildfires are increasingly threatening Mediterranean ecosystems due to climate change-induced wildfire activity and changing land management practices. This study used the landscape evolution model LAPSUS to simulate the long-term effects of wildfires on post-fire erosion in a specific catchment in Portugal. The results show that wildfires significantly increase post-fire erosion rates and lead to spatial variability in erosion patterns. The findings highlight the importance of considering large spatial and temporal scales when studying the impacts of recurring wildfires on landscape dynamics.
Wildfires have become an increasing threat for Mediterranean ecosystems, due to increasing climate change-induced wildfire activity and changing land management practices. In addition to the initial risk, wildfires can alter the soil in various ways-depending on fire severity-and cause enhanced post-fire erosion. Usually, post-fire erosion studies focus on a short time window and lack the attention for sediment dynamics at larger spatial scales. Yet, these large spatial and temporal scales are fundamental for a better understanding of long-term destructive effects of multiple recurring wildfires on post-fire erosion processes and catchment sediment dynamics. In this study the landscape evolution model LAPSUS was used to simulate erosion and deposition in the 404 km(2) agueda catchment in north-central Portugal over a 41-year (1979-2020) timespan, including eight wildfires each burning >1000 ha. To include variation in fire severity and its impact on the soil, four burn severity classes, represented by the difference normalized burn ratio (dNBR), were parameterized. Although model calibration was difficult due to lack of spatial and temporal measured data, the results show that long-term post-fire net erosion rates were significantly higher in the wildfire scenarios (5.95 ton ha(-1) yr(-1)) compared to those of a non-wildfire scenario (0.58 ton ha(-1) yr(-1)). Furthermore, erosion values increased with burn severity and multiple wildfires increased the overall catchment sediment build-up. Simulated erosion patterns showed great spatial variability, with large deposition and erosion rates inside streams. This variability made it difficult to identify land uses that were most sensitive for post-fire erosion, because some land uses were located in more erosion-sensitive areas (e.g. streams, gullies) or were more affected by high burn severity levels than others. Despite these limitations, LAPSUS performed well on addressing spatial sediment processes and can contribute to pre-fire management strategies, by identifying locations at risk of post-fire erosion.

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