Biogeomorphic influences on river corridor resilience to wildfire disturbances in a mountain stream of the Southern Rockies, USA

Sci Total Environ. 2022 May 10:820:153321. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.153321. Epub 2022 Jan 21.

Abstract

We examine a 9.4-km-long portion of a montane river corridor in the Southern Rockies, the upper 8 km of which burned in 2020. We focus on sediment storage in logjam backwaters and how spatial heterogeneity in the river corridor attenuates downstream fluxes of material following the wildfire. Wider portions of river corridor exhibit greater spatial heterogeneity, as reflected in multithread channel planform and more closely spaced abandoned beaver dams and channel-spanning logjams. Logjams in multithread reaches have greater volumes of backwater storage and store finer sediment than logjams in single-thread reaches. Despite substantial turnover of sediment in backwater storage during the first runoff season after the wildfire, the cumulative volume of sediment stored at 11 monitored logjams following the 2021 runoff season was 71% of the cumulative sediment volume at the logjams immediately after the fire. Floodplain vegetation regrowth was also faster and more complete at multithread reaches. Vegetation recovery contributed to overbank deposition in these reaches, in contrast to the bank erosion observed in single-thread reaches. More spatially heterogeneous portions of the river corridor appear to be disproportionately important in attenuating enhanced inputs of sediment following wildfire, and the cumulative effect of this attenuation across a river network likely enhances watershed-scale resilience to wildfire disturbance.

Keywords: Beaver; Flood; Floodplain; Logjam; Sediment; Spatial heterogeneity.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Fires*
  • Rivers
  • Rodentia
  • Seasons
  • Wildfires*