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Stream vertebrates after wildfire and salvage harvest: 3 megafires, 3 years, 30 mid-order streams in Western OR

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  • Overview
Wildfire frequency and intensity are expected to increase in many forested regions globally. Aquatic ecosystems and biota face multiple wildfire-induced changes in physical, chemical, and biological conditions, all of which can vary with burn severity, post-fire weather events and forest management, stream features, and yearly. Previously observed fish and amphibian responses range from extirpation to increased densities or no observed change, so aquatic vertebrate responses to fire remain equivocal. Because of the unpredictable nature of wildfires, many fire studies are limited in replication, further contributing to highly context-dependent biotic responses. We evaluated aquatic ecosystem processes, vertebrate populations, and communities in the first three years post-fire across 30 fourth-order streams within the Riverside, Beachie Creek and Holiday Farm fires to assess stream ecosystem function and fish and amphibian population and community trends over a range of post-fire aquatic habitat conditions. Pronounced ranges in physical characteristics were observed with burned canopy cover ranging from 15 to 95%, with concomitant changes in stream light and temperature. In addition to multiple species of salmonids, these streams collectively contain fish (dace, sculpin, and lamprey), amphibian (salamanders and frogs), and crayfish species often ignored in many salmonid focused post-fire studies.  Preliminary findings suggest that within the first three years, total vertebrate biomass was greater and age-0 trout size was larger in streams draining more severely burned watersheds, and vertebrate communities were minimally influenced by fire severity or extent. Vertebrate diversity was lower in more severely burned watersheds in the year-one post-fire but did not differ in years two or three indicating a short-lived response. The lack of high intensity precipitation following these fires allows this study to uniquely evaluate wildfire effects unconfounded by major geomorphic changes and further contributes to the growing body of empirical data on the persistence of aquatic vertebrates in post-fire conditions.

Impact/Purpose

This presentation will showcase results from post-wildfire fish and aquatic habitat monitoring conducted across 30 stream reaches in the Cascade Mountains (Pacific Northwest, USA) exposed to varying levels of wildfire and post-wildfire salvage logging harvest.  The results highlight that fish and other vertebrate (salamanders) abundances do not appear to be significantly depressed following wildfire, and reductions in diversity following wildfire were temporary. In addition, overall biomass was higher in burned watersheds with some species actually exhibiting increased body size. The combined results illustrate that wildfire effects on aquatic communities may be relatively neutral or even positive, particularly where wildfires are not followed by extreme flood events.

Citation

Swartz, A., A. Coble, B. Penaluna, R. Flitcroft, Joe Ebersole, AND M. Krawchuk. Stream vertebrates after wildfire and salvage harvest: 3 megafires, 3 years, 30 mid-order streams in Western OR. American Fisheries Society Annual Meeting, Honolulu, HI, September 15 - 19, 2024.
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Last updated on September 24, 2024
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