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Title: Parsing Weather Variability and Wildfire Effects on the Post-Fire Changes in Daily Stream Flows: A Quantile-Based Statistical Approach and Its Application

Journal Article · · Water Resources Research
ORCiD logo [1]; ORCiD logo [2];  [3]
  1. Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education (ORISE), Oak Ridge, TN (United States); US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Corvallis, OR (United States)
  2. US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Corvallis, OR (United States)
  3. US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Washington, DC (United States)

Determining wildland fire impacts on streamflow can be problematic as the hydrology in burned watersheds is influenced by post-fire weather conditions. Here, this study presents a quantile-based analytical framework for assessing fire impacts on low and peak daily flow magnitudes, while accounting for post-fire weather influences. This framework entails (a) the bootstrap method to compute the relative change in the post-fire annual flow and weather statistics, (b) double mass analysis to detect if post-fire baseflow and quick-flow yield ratios are significantly altered, and (c) a quantile regression method to parse fire effects on flow at a specific quantile. We illustrate the applicability of this analytical framework using 44 western US streams with at least 5% of their watershed area burned. Results indicate that large, high-severity burns in upland watersheds can raise the streamflow magnitude at the 0.05th and 0.95th quantiles for at least the five post-fire years. Quantile regression results show that the median fire-related increase in flow for the five post-fire years can be up to 5,000% (Standard Error; S.E. < 2%) at the 0.05th E quantile and 161% (S.E. < 10%) at the 0.95th quantile. The fire-related increase in flow was often pronounced at the 0.05th quantile for streams in the Pacific Northwest and California regions. The difference in fire effects on flow (at both quantiles) across streams was related to post-fire weather, pyrology, physiography, and land cover. The proposed analytical framework can be useful for detecting and quantifying fire effects on the low and peak stream flows in burned watersheds without overlapping disturbances.

Research Organization:
Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education (ORISE), Oak Ridge, TN (United States)
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE Office of Science (SC); USEPA
Grant/Contract Number:
SC0014664
OSTI ID:
1982068
Journal Information:
Water Resources Research, Journal Name: Water Resources Research Journal Issue: 10 Vol. 57; ISSN 0043-1397
Publisher:
American Geophysical Union (AGU)Copyright Statement
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English

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