Dissolved black carbon in grassland streams: is there an effect of recent fire history?

TitleDissolved black carbon in grassland streams: is there an effect of recent fire history?
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2013
AuthorsDing, Y, Yamashita, Y, Dodds, WK, Jaffe, R
JournalChemosphere
Volume90
Pagination2557 -2562
Accession NumberKNZ001542
KeywordsBPCA, Dissolved black carbon, Dissolved organic carbon, Fire frequency, Grassland streams, Konza Prairie
Abstract

While the existence of black carbon as part of dissolved organic matter (DOM) has been confirmed, quantitative determinations of dissolved black carbon (DBC) in freshwater ecosystem and information on factors controlling its concentration are scarce. In this study, stream surface water samples from a series of watersheds subject to different burn frequencies in Konza Prairie (Kansas, USA) were collected in order to determine if recent fire history has a noticeable effect on DBC concentration. The DBC levels detected ranged from 0.04 to 0.11 mg L−1, accounting for ca. 3.32 ± 0.51% of dissolved organic carbon (DOC). No correlation was found between DBC concentration and neither fire frequency nor time since last burn. We suggest that limited DBC flux is related to high burning efficiency, possibly greater export during periods of high discharge and/or the continuous export of DBC over long time scales. A linear correlation between DOC and DBC concentrations was observed, suggesting the export mechanisms determining DOC and DBC concentrations are likely coupled. The potential influence of fire history was less than the influence of other factors controlling the DOC and DBC dynamics in this ecosystem. Assuming similar conditions and processes apply in grasslands elsewhere, extrapolation to a global scale would suggest a global grasslands flux of DBC on the order of 0.14 Mt carbon year−1.

URLhttps://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0045653512013604?via%3Dihub
DOI10.1016/j.chemosphere.2012.10.098