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Fire effects on physical and chemical water quality in the southeast

Table 1. Fire effects on physical and chemical water quality in the southeast.

Location

Prescription

Stream Chemistry

Sediment

Reference

Clemson Forest, South Carolina (Piedmont)

Spring and summer prescribed burns.

Flame lengths ranged from 0.5-1.0 m.

NA

No significant amounts of soil movement between season, single burns, or no burns.

Goebel, N.B. et al. 1967

Northern Mississippi (Upper Coastal Plain)

Slow backfires followed by herbicide injection of remaining hardwoods.

NA

One-fourth of storm flow events increased by significant amounts. Overland flow increases were also observed which increased sediment loadings by approximately 400 lb/ac.

Ursic, S.J. 1970

South Carolina (Piedmont)

Moderately intense prescribed burn.

NA

Significant soil movement was not detected.

Cushwa, C.T. et al. 1971

USAEC\xe2\x80\x99s Savannah River Plant, South Carolina (Piedmont)

Prescribed burn.

Cations in the runoff increased after the burn, NO3 and PO4 were high following the first rainfall after the fire, but not in subsequent rainfalls.

NA

Lewis, W.M., Jr., 1974

Blue Ridge Mountain Physiographic Province in South Carolina (Blue Ridge)

Intense wildfire.

Largest nutrient increase was calcium

NO3-N reached a maximum of 0.394 mg/L and the highest levels occurred in watersheds that received a fertilizer application and fire retardants.

Increased levels of NO3-N, NH4-N, K, Na, Ca, and Mg occurred during the first year and levels were comparable to other natural and disturbed streams in the Southern Appalachians.

TSS showed no relationship with watershed condition.

Maximum concentration was 81.8 mg/L

Neary and Currier 1982

South Carolina (Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Plain)

Prescribed fire

No changes in the chemical constituents of the stream that were solely attributable to the fire treatments.

NA

Richter, D.D. et al. 1982

Clemson Experimental Forest, South Carolina

(Piedmont)

Prescribed burn

flame heights averaged 0.3 m on two watersheds and ~1m on the other two watersheds

No significant changes in NO3-N, NH4-N, Ca, Mg, or K following burns.

The burns did not significantly affect storm runoff, sediment concentrations, or sediment export.

Douglass, J.E. and Van Lear, D.H. 1983

Clemson Experimental Forest, South Carolina

(Piedmont)

Low-intensity prescribed burns

Nutrient export increased slightly but was due to harvesting\xe2\x80\x99s influence on runoff volumes.

Elevated sediment concentrations elevated slightly but was attributed to harvesting impacts.

Van Lear, D.H. et al. 1985

Southern Appalachian Mountains, South Carolina (Southwestern Appalachians)

High intensity broadcast burn.

Average flame length was 1.0-1.5m, with 6-10m flames occurring near slash piles.

NA

No significant movement resulting from the burn.

Soil infiltration rates unaffected.

Van Lear and Danieovich 1988

Whitehall Forest, University of Georgia (Piedmont)

Site preparation burn

No flame temperature or height records available.

NA

Sediment production was low from 1x5m plots with slopes up to 30% and rainfall simulation intensities as high as 100 mm/hr.

Shahlaee, A.K. et al. 1991

Nantahala National Forest of North Carolina (Southwestern Appalachians)

Fires characterized as high intensity and light severity.

Stream water NO3- concentrations increased in the one stream sampled following the burn.

Losses of N were below levels of concern for water quality or future site productivity

NA

Knoepp and Swank 1993

Nantahala Mountains, western North Carolina (Southwestern Appalachians)

Site preparation burn.

Maximum flame temperatures ranged from 33-78oC

NA

Residual forest floor was resistant to erosion.

Swift et al. 1993

Nantahala Mountains, western North Carolina (Southwestern Appalachians)

< 52oC in low slope positions.

160 to <152 oC at mid-slope.

804 to as low as 52oC in upper slope positions.

No significant NO3-N or NH4-N response in stream water.

NA

Vose et al. 1999

Angelina County in east Texas (South Central Plains)

The fire burned with low intensity and light severity, with maximum temperatures ranging between 200-300oC.

Increase loss of inorganic N, PO4-, K+, Mg+2, and Ca+2 was greater in runoff leaving burned plots but was too variable to be significantly higher statistically.

Sediment loss was significantly greater from burned plots than control plots.

Maximum sediment loss followed first large storm event, then gradually decreased over the next 3 months.

Field, J.P. et al. 2000

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