6 research outputs found
Pre- and post-fire pollutant loads in an urban fringe watershed in Southern California
Post-fire runoff has the potential to be a large source of contaminants to downstream areas. However, the magnitude of this effect in urban fringe watersheds adjacent to large sources of airborne contaminants is not well documented. The current study investigates the impacts of wildfire on stormwater contaminant loading from the upper Arroyo Seco watershed, burned in 2009. This watershed is adjacent to the Greater Los Angeles, CA, USA area and has not burned in over 60 years. Consequently, it acts as a sink for regional urban pollutants and presents an opportunity to study the impacts of wildfire. Pre- and post-fire storm samples were collected and analyzed for basic cations, trace metals, and total suspended solids. The loss of vegetation and changes in soil properties from the fire greatly increased the magnitude of storm runoff, resulting in sediment-laden floods carrying high concentrations of particulate-bound constituents. Post-fire concentrations and loads were up to three orders of magnitude greater than pre-fire values for many trace metals, including lead and cadmium. A shift was also observed in the timing of chemical delivery, where maximum suspended sediment, trace metal, and cation concentrations coincided with, rather than preceded, peak discharge in the post-fire runoff, amplifying the fire's impacts on mass loading. The results emphasize the importance of sediment delivery as a primary mechanism for post-fire contaminant transport and suggest that traditional management practices that focus on treating only the early portion of storm runoff may be less effective following wildfire. We also advocate that watersheds impacted by regional urban pollutants have the potential to pose significant risk for downstream communities and ecosystems after fire. © 2013 Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht
Namib Desert edaphic bacterial, fungal and archaeal communities assemble through deterministic processes but are influenced by different abiotic parameters
The central Namib Desert is hyperarid, where
limited plant growth ensures that biogeochemical processes
are largely driven by microbial populations. Recent
research has shown that niche partitioning is critically
involved in the assembly of Namib Desert edaphic communities.
However, these studies have mainly focussed on
the Domain Bacteria. Using microbial community fingerprinting,
we compared the assembly of the bacterial, fungal
and archaeal populations of microbial communities across
nine soil niches from four Namib Desert soil habitats (riverbed,
dune, gravel plain and salt pan). Permutational multivariate
analysis of variance indicated that the nine soil
niches presented significantly different physicochemistries
(R
2
= 0.8306, P ≤ 0.0001) and that bacterial, fungal and
archaeal populations were soil niche specific (R
2
≥ 0.64,
P ≤ 0.001). However, the abiotic drivers of community
structure were Domain-specific (P < 0.05), with P, clay and
sand fraction, and NH4
influencing bacterial, fungal and archaeal communities, respectively. Soil physicochemistry
and soil niche explained over 50% of the variation in
community structure, and communities displayed strong
non-random patterns of co-occurrence. Taken together,
these results demonstrate that in central Namib Desert soil
microbial communities, assembly is principally driven by
deterministic processes.The South African National Research Foundation (Grant Number N00113-95565) and the University of Pretoria (UP).http://link.springer.com/journal/7922018-01-31hb2017Genetic