Fates and fingerprints of sulfur and carbon following wildfire in economically important croplands of California, U.S. Journal Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Sulfur (S) is widely used in agriculture, yet little is known about its fates within upland watersheds, particularly in combination with disturbances like wildfire. Our study examined the effects of land use and wildfire on the biogeochemical "fingerprints," or the quantity and chemical composition, of S and carbon (C). We conducted our research within the Napa River Watershed, California, U.S., where high S applications to vineyards are common, and ~ 20% of the watershed burned in October 2017, introducing a disturbance now common across the warmer, drier Western U.S. We used a laboratory rainfall experiment to compare unburned and low severity burned vineyard and grassland soils. We then sampled streams draining sub-catchments with differing land use and degrees of burn and burn severity to understand combined effects at broader spatial scales. Before the laboratory experiment, vineyard soils had 2-3.5 times more S than grassland soils, while burned soils-regardless of land use-had 1.5-2 times more C than unburned soils. During the laboratory experiment, vineyard soil leachates had 16-20 times more S than grassland leachates, whereas leachate C was more variable across land use and burn soil types. Unburned and burned vineyard soils leached S with δ34S values enriched 6-15‰ relative to grassland soils, likely due to microbial S processes within vineyard soils. Streams draining vineyards also had the fingerprint of agricultural S, with ~2-5 fold higher S concentrations and ~ 10‰ enriched δ34S-SO42- values relative to streams draining non-agricultural areas. However, streams draining a higher fraction of burned non-agricultural areas also had enriched δ34S values relative to unburned non-agricultural areas, which we attribute to loss of 32S during combustion. Our findings illustrate the interacting effects of wildfire and land use on watershed S and C cycling-a new consideration under a changing climate, with significant implications for ecosystem function and human health.

publication date

  • January 1, 2021

has restriction

  • hybrid

Date in CU Experts

  • January 28, 2021 11:17 AM

Full Author List

  • Hermes AL; Ebel BA; Murphy SF; Hinckley E-LS

author count

  • 4

Other Profiles

Electronic International Standard Serial Number (EISSN)

  • 1879-1026

Additional Document Info

start page

  • 142179

volume

  • 750