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Exploring spatial variation in fish and aquatic ecosystem responses to wildfire in the Pacific Northwest

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  • Overview
Recent shifts in wildfire regimes have increased interest in spatially explicit models and indices that characterize the risks that wildfires pose to fish and aquatic ecosystems. These models are of interest to both resource managers and scientists to aid in the development of testable hypotheses and guide resource management decisions. However, there is substantial uncertainty about wildfire risk to fish and aquatic ecosystems and how ecosystem responses vary spatially across different regions. Here, we applied a dynamic food web simulation model to explore how variation in stream temperature can influence fish and aquatic ecosystem responses to wildfire in the Pacific Northwest. In the model, we conducted a sensitivity analysis where we varied background stream thermal conditions that may contribute spatial heterogeneity to fish responses to wildfire. We then used outputs from model simulations to identify potential ecological thresholds of stream temperature that may be stressful for fish if wildfires occur. Ecological thresholds identified by the model could then be linked to maps of stream temperature conditions across the Pacific Northwest to identify regions where fish may be more likely to be resilient to fire versus regions of potential vulnerability. Collectively, model simulations seek to explore the extent to which fire effects on aquatic ecosystems are likely to vary according to the ecological context of where a fire takes place. As a result, insights as provided by these model simulations can act as conceptual models which can be used to improve understanding, generate new hypotheses, and inform wildfire risk assessments for the region.  

Impact/Purpose

Wildfire can affect stream ecosystem dynamics in a variety of ways, through changes in water chemistry, water temperature, and restructuring of physical habitat.  These changes can influence the structure of fish communities and the organisms they eat, via effects on primary productivity, predation and competition, and mortality. This talk will present results applying a trophic productivity model to assess how changes in freshwater food webs following wildfire can, depending on context, ameliorate or exacerbate wildfire effects on fish and other aquatic organisms.

Citation

Roon, D., J. Bellmore, J. Benjamin, F. Robinne, Joe Ebersole, R. Flitcroft, J. Compton, J. Dunham, AND K. Bladon. Exploring spatial variation in fish and aquatic ecosystem responses to wildfire in the Pacific Northwest. American Fisheries Society Annual Meeting, Honolulu, HI, September 15 - 19, 2024.
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Last updated on October 10, 2024
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