Active wildfire seasons are 'dimming the lights' for some Northern California lakes
Thick smoke from large fires can lead to lower water temperatures and decreased oxygen for wildlife in those waters.
Thick smoke from large fires can lead to lower water temperatures and decreased oxygen for wildlife in those waters.
Thick smoke from large fires can lead to lower water temperatures and decreased oxygen for wildlife in those waters.
California's most active wildfire years may be "dimming the lights" for some of the state's freshwater habitats.
A recent study from UC Davis examined three of California's biggest wildfire seasons: 2018, 2020 and 2021. During each of those years, smoke was persistent and widespread. In some cases, lakes experienced a month of high density smoke conditions.
“There’s a lot of research on impacts to human health but not much on impacts to ecosystem health,” said Dr. Adrianne Smits, an aquatic systems ecologist at UC Davis.
Smits and her fellow UC Davis scientists are changing that. The group has a network of sensors set up in several lake habitats around California. They include Lake Tahoe, Emerald Lake, Clear Lake, Castle Lake as well as a group of smaller lakes in the Sequoia National Forest.
"We had everything from Lake Tahoe, kind of our clearest, coldest lake, all the way to Clear Lake in the coast range, which is quite murky and has a lot of algal growth and is pretty warm," Smits said.
Each lake responds a bit differently to wildfire smoke, but Smits said there were similarities across the data. Most notably, water temperatures tended to be lower during years with the most persistent and thick wildfire smoke. This is due to smoke particles in the air blocking sunlight from reaching the water, essentially "dimming the lights."
Those temperature changes can be connected to changes in algal productivity and oxygen content in the water. The smoke itself can also lower the clarity of each lake's water. All of this can disrupt the balance of each lake system, but it's not yet clear if that would be brief or could linger long term.
"We don’t have the answer yet for what smoke is doing in every single lake but we should pay attention to it," Smits said.
A connection to climate change
Around the world, wildfire seasons are becoming longer with the risk for large wildfires increasing. This trend is connected to rising global temperatures and changing precipitation patterns, both of which are combining to increase the amount of wildland fuels.
There will still be years with less wildfire activity. California has seen proof of this during the past few years. More than 4 million acres burned throughout the state in 2020. In 2021, over 2 million acres burned. But during the last two wildfire seasons, under 400,000 acres burned.
Smits said that her team has gathered data from these lower smoke years, t0o. That will be analyzed to see how well lake ecosystems can recover.
Historical data in Lake Tahoe shows that that system has seen rebounds in water clarity in the past.
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