(Press-News.org) Years after wildfires burn forests and watersheds, the contaminants left behind continue to poison rivers and streams across the Western U.S. — much longer than scientists estimated.
A new study, published today in Nature Communications Earth & Environment, analyzed water quality in more than 500 watersheds across the Western U.S., and is the first large-scale assessment of post-wildfire quality.
The research was led by scientists from the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Science (CIRES) at the University of Colorado Boulder.
“We were attempting to look at notable trends in post-wildfire water quality across the entire U.S. West, to help inform water management strategies in preparing for wildfire effects,” said Carli Brucker, lead author and former CU Boulder and Western Water Assessment PhD student.
The results showed contaminants like organic carbon, phosphorus, nitrogen, and sediment can degrade water quality for up to eight years after a fire. Water managers can use this data to help them plan for the future and respond appropriately when wildfires strike.
CIRES Fellow and Western Water Assessment Director Ben Livneh was the principal investigator and co-author of the study. Much of his research focuses on hydrology, or water supply, on a continental scale. When he realized he could use the same approach to understand large-scale trends in water quality, he was excited to test the method.
“There’s been a lot of work, for example, in the National Climate Assessment and the International Panel on Climate Change talking about changes in global water supply,” said Livneh, associate professor in the Department of Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering. “But those assessments point to this gap in water quality assessments in a continental scale context, whereas people like me in physical hydrology have been thinking about the continental scale challenges for a while.”
Researchers have long known that fire ash and soil destruction contribute to degraded water quality. Yet, past research has largely been limited to state and municipal studies — cities and towns test water quality in local streams and rivers following large fires.
For the new study, the team analyzed more than 100,000 water samples from 500 sites: half from burned river basins and half from unburned. They measured levels of organic carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus, and sediment as well as turbidity, or cloudiness, of each sample.
To understand wildfire-driven impacts, the team built data-driven models to measure how much contaminants changed in each basin before and after wildfires. In the final step, they compiled data to find the average across the burned basins for each pre- and post-wildfire year, and then compared those to the unburned basins.
The results showed watersheds take longer to recover after wildfires than previous studies found. Organic carbon, phosphorus, and turbidity are significantly elevated in the first one to five years post-fire. Nitrogen and sediment show significant increases up to eight years post-fire. Fire-driven impacts were worse in more forested areas.
“It can take two years, up to eight years, for the effect to be fully felt,” Livneh said. “Sometimes it can be a delayed effect, meaning, it's not all happening right away, or sometimes you need a big enough storm that will mobilize enough of the leftover contaminants.”
Each watershed in the study felt the impacts differently. This is likely tied to where the fire struck — a fire closer to the river would be worse than an upstream fire. Different soils, vegetation, and weather also change the impact in each watershed, making it difficult to plan for the future.
“There's a huge amount of variability in sedimentation rates,” said Brucker, who now works as a consultant. “Some streams are completely clear of sediment after wildfires, and some have 2000 times the amount of sediment.”
Despite variability across river basins, the study provides concrete numbers that give insight to water managers across the Western U.S. Researchers hope the results provide better direction on informing future planning efforts for increasing wildfire resilience.
“I'm hoping that providing concrete numbers is very impactful to water managers,” Brucker said. “You can’t fund resilience improvements on general concerns alone. Water managers need real numbers for planning, and that’s what we’re providing,” Brucker said.
###
END
Wildfires threaten water quality for up to eight years after they burn
A study of 100,000 water samples from 500 river basins found elevated levels of contaminants persist for years after a fire
2025-06-23
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
More effective production of “green” hydrogen with new combined material
2025-06-23
The chemical reaction to produce hydrogen from water is several times more effective when using a combination of new materials in three layers, according to researchers at Linköping University in Sweden. Hydrogen produced from water is a promising renewable energy source – especially if the hydrogen is produced using sunlight.
The production of new petrol and diesel cars will be banned in the EU as of 2035. Electric motors are expected to become increasingly common in vehicles – but they are not suitable for all types of transport.
“Passenger cars can have a battery, but heavy trucks, ships or aircraft cannot use ...
Study reveals processes important for skin cancer aggressiveness and identifies two classes of drugs that may block them
2025-06-23
Researchers have discovered that the most aggressive melanomas, the deadliest form of skin cancer, overactivate two key processes in mitochondria, the components of cells that provide energy. Blocking these pathways with currently available drugs effectively killed melanoma cells. The findings are published by Wiley online in CANCER, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer Society.
By mapping the proteins expressed in 151 tumor and normal skin samples, investigators found that the most aggressive melanomas hyper-activate the ...
Recycled plastics can affect hormone systems and metabolism
2025-06-23
A single pellet of recycled plastic can contain over 80 different chemicals. A new study with researchers from University of Gothenburg and Leipzig shows that recycled polyethylene plastic can leach chemicals into water causing impacts in the hormone systems and lipid metabolism of zebrafish larvae.
The plastic pollution crisis has reached global levels, threatening both planetary and human health, and recycling is proposed as one of the solutions to the plastics pollution crisis. However, as plastics contain thousands of chemical additives and other substances that can be toxic, and these are almost ...
How babies are affected by their mother’s age
2025-06-23
Giving birth to a child after 40 is becoming more and more common – but it can entail an increased risk to the child. A new study based on data from over 300,000 births in Sweden shows that children of older mothers are more often born prematurely or with complications, especially when the mother is 45 years of age or older.
In large parts of the world, women are having children later and later in life. In Sweden, 4.8% of mothers were 40 years of age or older in 2022. Previous research has shown that older mothers differ from younger mothers in several respects such as having a higher BMI, a higher proportion having utilised assisted ...
‘Closed loop’ learning barriers prevent doctors from using life-saving bedside ultrasound
2025-06-23
Many doctors abandon a potentially life-saving medical scanning technology soon after training, because systemic barriers prevent it from becoming part of their routine practice, a study has found.
Point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) enables doctors to perform rapid bedside scans using a portable device. This can quickly reveal life-threatening problems – including heart failure, fluid in the lungs, or internal bleeding – that can often be treated if identified in time.
Although thousands of doctors in the UK are now trained to use POCUS, research, including the new study, shows that many do not continue to use it in practice after completing ...
Simple blood test predicts cognitive decline in Alzheimer's patients, new study shows
2025-06-22
(Helsinki, Finland, Monday, 23 June 2025) Insulin resistance detected by routine triglyceride-glucose (TyG) index can flag people with early Alzheimer’s who are four times more likely to present rapid cognitive decline, according to new research presented at the European Academy of Neurology (EAN) Congress 2025.1
Neurologists at the University of Brescia reviewed records for 315 non-diabetic patients with cognitive deficits, including 200 with biologically confirmed Alzheimer’s disease. All subjects underwent an assessment of insulin resistance using the TyG index and a clinical follow-up of 3 years. When patients ...
Antimicrobial resistance genes hitch rides on imported seafood
2025-06-22
Highlights:
Resistance to colistin, a potent antibiotic, is on the rise.
In 2016, researchers discovered that colistin resistance could be transferred laterally among microbes.
Researchers have isolated genes that confer colistin resistance from imported seafood purchased from markets in Atlanta, Ga.
The findings suggest imported seafood could promote the spread of transmissible colistin resistance.
Los Angeles, Calif.—Colistin is a potent, last-resort antibiotic, used only to treat people ...
New way to find “aged” cells marks fresh approach for research into ageing
2025-06-21
Tokyo, Japan – Researchers from Tokyo Metropolitan University have created a new way of telling “aged” human cells apart from younger ones using electric fields. While key markers have been found for these “senescent” cells, current methods require biochemical “labels” which are difficult to apply and affect the cells themselves, making them difficult to study. The new method is label-free and less damaging. The team aims to diversify the method, extending it to other cell types.
Ageing starts at the cellular level. As we get older, aged or “senescent” cells accumulate in our body. Not only have ...
From blood sugar to brain relief: GLP-1 therapy slashes migraine frequency
2025-06-20
(Helsinki, Finland, Saturday, 21 June 2025) A diabetes medication that lowers brain fluid pressure has cut monthly migraine days by more than half, according to a new study presented today at the European Academy of Neurology (EAN) Congress 2025.1
Researchers at the Headache Centre of the University of Naples “Federico II” gave the glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist liraglutide to 26 adults with obesity and chronic migraine (defined as ≥15 headache days per month). Patients reported an average of 11 fewer headache days per month, while disability scores on the Migraine Disability Assessment Test ...
Variability in heart rate during sleep may reveal early signs of stroke, depression or cognitive dysfunction, new study shows
2025-06-20
(Helsinki, Finland, Saturday, 21 June 2025) New research, presented today at the European Academy of Neurology (EAN) Congress 2025, has uncovered a powerful link between nighttime heart rhythm and future health conditions, even in people with no obvious sleep problems.1
The study, which was conducted at the Department of Neurology, Inselspital, the University Hospital of Bern, analysed 4,170 individuals over an observation period of 13,217 person-years, found that heart rate variability (HRV) during sleep can serve ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
A metamaterial that bridges air and water
Evaluating building materials for climate impact and noise suppression
Scores of dinosaurs walked and swam along a Bolivian shoreline
Captive bottlenose dolphins vary vocalizations during enrichment activities
Adults who want children favor older-looking partners (but not for their money), study suggests
Authoritative parenting styles are associated with better mental health and self-esteem among adolescents, while authoritarian parenting styles are associated with depression and lower self-esteem and
A rose by any other name? Not necessarily—how words sound aesthetically correlates with their memorability, study finds
The odds of iron deficiency in adolescent girls are almost 14 times higher among those who experience heavy menstruation and follow a meat-restricted diet, compared to girls with normal menstruation w
Sperm tails and male infertility: Critical protein revealed by ultrastructure microscope
Bumblebees launch a three-stage defensive response when their nest is disturbed
Experimental drug repairs DNA damage caused by disease
Study shows common childhood virus can drive bladder cancer development
New test distinguishes vaccine-induced false positives from active HIV infection
Becoming human in southern Africa: What ancient hunter-gatherer genomes reveal
The transformation of adult heart transplantation in the United States and Western Europe
American Physical Society launches APS Open Science to expand global participation in trusted physics research
Family dogs boost adolescent mental health through the microbiome
Prehab can improve recovery after surgery, but barriers remain
Ten-thousand-year-old genomes from southern Africa change picture of human evolution
NeuMap: a pioneering map of neutrophils that redefines their role in health, infection, and inflammation
KATRIN tightens the net around the elusive sterile neutrino
Antipsychotic medication use by older adults
Statewide analysis quantifies life-saving potential of stop the bleed
Complex life developed earlier than previously thought, new study reveals
Semaglutide and early-stage metabolic abnormalities in individuals with schizophrenia spectrum disorders
Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital and Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School receive National Rare Disease Center of Excellence recognition
The Mohn Prize for 2026 awarded to Canadian John Smol
Americans more likely to accept guidance from AMA than CDC on vaccine safety
How two Russian scientists changed the way we understand aging and cancer
Noninvasive imaging could replace finger pricks for people with diabetes
[Press-News.org] Wildfires threaten water quality for up to eight years after they burnA study of 100,000 water samples from 500 river basins found elevated levels of contaminants persist for years after a fire