Hydrology, rather than wildfire burn extent, determines post-fire organic and black carbon export from mountain rivers in central coastal California
收藏DataONE2023-09-05 更新2024-06-08 收录
下载链接:
https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:20220cbd194d1ca7b46032bb4315ae46c1c9b012abe26107ad9235b28a362694
下载链接
链接失效反馈官方服务:
资源简介:
Coastal mountain rivers export disproportionately high quantities of terrestrial organic carbon directly to the ocean, feeding microbial communities and altering coastal ecology. To better predict and mitigate the effects of wildfires on aquatic ecosystems and resources, we must evaluate the relationships between fire, hydrology, and carbon export, particularly in the fire-prone western United States. This study examined the spatiotemporal export of particulate and dissolved organic carbon (POC and DOC, respectively) and particulate and dissolved black carbon (PBC and DBC, respectively) from five coastal mountain watersheds following the 2020 CZU Lightning Complex Fires (California, USA). Despite high variability in watershed burn extent (20-100%), annual POC, DOC, PBC, and DBC concentrations remained relatively stable among the different watersheds. Instead, they correlated significantly with watershed discharge. Our findings indicate that hydrology, rather than burn extent, is a primary driver of post-fire carbon export in coastal mountain watersheds.
创建时间:
2023-12-30



