Water Stewardship Information Sources

Resource Name Water balance of a burned and unburned forested boreal peatland
Unique File Number 292
Information Type applied research
Surface Water
Aquatic Ecosystem
Groundwater
Groundwater & Surface Water A
Management for Natural & Industrial Hazards A
Strengths Boreal plains of northern Alberta, links changes in evaporation, water table and peat properties following fire
Limitations
Challenges
Outstanding Research Questions
Outstanding Research Questions
Information Subtype wetland
Organization McMaster University
Resource Name Thompson, D. K., Benscoter, B. W. and Waddington, J. M. (2013), Water balance of a burned and unburned forested boreal peatland. Hydrol. Process.. doi: 10.1002/hyp.10074
Resource Purpose We examined the water balance of a forested ombrotrophic peatland and adjacent burned peatland in the boreal plain of western Canada over a 3-year period. Complete combustion of foliage and fine branches dramatically increased shortwave radiation inputs to the peat surface while halting all tree transpiration at the burned site. End-of-winter snowpack was 7–25% higher at the burned site likely due to decreased ablation from the tree canopy at the unburned site. Shrub regrowth at the burned site was rapid post-fire, and shading by the shrub canopy in the burned site approached that of the unburned site within 3 years after fire. Site-averaged surface resistance to evaporation was not different between sites, though surface resistance in hollows was lower in the burned site. Water loss at both burned and unburned sites is largely driven by surface evaporative losses. Evaporation at the burned site marginally exceeded the sum of pre-fire transpiration and interception at the unburned site, suggesting that evapotranspiration during the growing season was 20–40 mm greater at the burned peatland. Although the net change in water storage during the growing season was largely unchanged by fire, the lack of low-density surface peat in the burned site appears to have decreased specific yield, leading to greater water table decline at the burned site despite similar net change in storage.
Type of Information article
How does this help decision making?
Program Status complete
NE Coverage Boreal Plains
Drinking Water
Ecosystem y
Fish
Groundwater
Public Safety
SW Quality
SW Quantity y
Link DOI: 10.1002/hyp.10074
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