Current global warming projections suggest a possible increase in wildfire and drought, augmenting the need to understand how drought following wildfire affects the recovery of stream channels in relation to sediment dynamics. We investigated post-wildfire geomorphic responses caused by storms during a prolonged drought following the 2013 Springs Fire in southern California (USA), using multi-temporal Terrestrial Laser Scanning and detailed field measurements. After the fire, a dry-season dry-ravel sediment pulse contributed sand and small gravel to hillslope-channel margins in Big Sycamore Creek and its tributaries. A small storm in WY 2014 generated sufficient flow to mobilize a portion of the sediment derived from the dry-ravel pulse and deposited the fine sediment in the channel, totaling ~0.60 m3/m of volume per unit length of channel. The sediment deposit buried step-pool habitat structure and reduced roughness by over 90%. These changes altered sediment transport characteristics of the bed material present before and after the storm; the ratio of available to critical shear stress (t
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) increased by five times. Storms during WY 2015 contributed additional fine sediment from tributaries and lower hillslopes and hyperconcentrated flow transported and deposited additional sediment in the channel. Together these sources delivered sediment on the order of six times that in 2014, further increasing t
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. These storms during multi-year drought following wildfire transformed channel dynamics. The increased sediment transport capacity persisted during the drought period characterized by the longer residence time of relatively fine-grained post-fire channel sedimentation. This contrasts with wetter years, when post-fire sediment is transported from the fluvial system during the same season as the post-fire sediment pulse. Results of this short-term study highlight the complex and substantial effects of multi-year drought on geomorphic responses following wildfire. These responses influence pool habitat that is critical to longer-term post-wildfire riparian ecosystem recovery