A review and synthesis of post-wildfire shifts in hydrologic processes and streamflow generation mechanisms

Environmental Research: Water
By: , and 

Links

Abstract

Critical water supply watersheds in the western United States (WUS) are impacted by wildfires, with potential negative effects on water quality and quantity. Scientific understanding is currently insufficient to deliver estimates of wildfire consequences for water quantity that are regionally accurate. Regional variability in the directionality and magnitude of post-wildfire shifts in streamflow generation fuels uncertainty in estimates of wildfire effects on water supply. In this work we provide a narrative review of wildfire effects on hydrologic processes and the resulting changes in streamflow generation mechanisms with a focus on the WUS, incorporating other global regions when pertinent. A conceptual model summary of wildfire effects on streamflow generation emphasizes: (1) precipitation seasonality, (2) synchrony of precipitation and potential evapotranspiration, (3) net shifts in interception, evaporation, and transpiration relative to total annual precipitation, (4) vegetation changes, including compensatory uptake and type conversion, (5) degree of overlap in rainfall rates and infiltration, (6) fire extent and severity, (7) burn scar positioning (e.g. in headwaters or proximal to watershed outlet), (8) scale-dependent groundwater leakage, (9) near-surface water storage reduction, and (10) soil to groundwater connectivity. Ongoing gaps and challenges include separating the influences of precipitation variability, water withdrawals, and post-fire land management; compound and overlapping disturbances; and lack of pre-fire data. Notable future opportunities include: harnessing ever-improving gridded and remotely sensed precipitation and fire-effects data; linking geophysical, isotopic tracer, and geochemical signatures to diagnose hydrologic changes; leveraging physically based and data-driven model advancements; and analyzing streamflow generation recovery trajectories across diverse watersheds.

Suggested Citation

Ebel, B.A., Hammond, J., Walvoord, M.A., Partridge, T.F., Rey, D., Murphy, S.F., 2026, A review and synthesis of post-wildfire shifts in hydrologic processes and streamflow generation mechanisms: Environmental Research: Water, v. 1, no. 4, 042001, 29 p., https://doi.org/10.1088/3033-4942/ae2a64.

Study Area

Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title A review and synthesis of post-wildfire shifts in hydrologic processes and streamflow generation mechanisms
Series title Environmental Research: Water
DOI 10.1088/3033-4942/ae2a64
Volume 1
Issue 4
Publication Date January 15, 2026
Year Published 2026
Language English
Publisher IOP Publishing
Contributing office(s) WMA - Earth System Processes Division
Description 042001, 29 p.
Country United States
Other Geospatial western United States
Additional publication details