Wildfire Runoff: Protecting Drinking Water | River Health Impacts

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Wildfires’ Lingering Impact on Water Quality



Wildfires’ lingering Impact on Water Quality: A Long-Term Threat

By Amelia Green | DENVER – 2025/06/23 11:25:24

New research reveals that wildfires can cause long-lasting damage to water quality, wiht contaminants persisting for years after the flames are extinguished.


wildfires are known for their immediate destruction, but a new study highlights a less visible, long-term result: the degradation of water quality. Researchers have found that the impact of wildfires on water sources can last for years,posing significant challenges for water treatment plants adn potentially affecting communities’ access to clean water.

By accounting for normal water quality variability due to factors like rainfall and temperature, scientists were able to isolate the specific impact of wildfires. This allowed them to track how much water quality deviated after a fire, year after year.

Immediate and Severe Contamination

The findings revealed a stark reality. In the first year following a fire, the concentrations of certain contaminants surged dramatically. Levels of sediment and turbidity – the cloudiness of the water – were found to be 19 to 286 times higher than prefire levels. According to the study, such high sediment levels can overwhelm water treatment plant filters, leading to costly treatment and maintenance. The researchers used the analogy of trying to filter muddy water with a coffee filter to illustrate the problem.

Concentrations of organic carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus also increased significantly, ranging from three to 103 times greater in the burned basins. These dissolved remnants of burned plants and soil pose a particular threat. When they interact with chlorine, which is commonly used to disinfect drinking water, they can create harmful chemicals known as disinfection byproducts, some of which have been linked to cancer.

We found that levels of sediment and turbidity – the cloudiness of the water – were 19 to 286 times higher than prefire levels.

Persistent Contamination Over Years

Perhaps more surprising was the persistence of these impacts. While the most significant spikes in phosphorus, nitrate, organic carbon, and sediment typically occurred within the first one to three years, some contaminants remained elevated for much longer.

Charts show how contaminants lingered in water supplies for years after wildfires.
Contaminants including phosphorus, organic carbon and nitrates lingered in water supplies for years after wildfires. The charts show the average among all burned basins eight years before fires (light blue) and all burned basins after fires (orange).The gray bars show levels in the year instantly after the fire. The horizontal purple line shows levels that would be expected without a fire, based on the prefire years.
Carli Brucker, et al., 2025, Nature Communications Earth & Environment

Significantly elevated levels of nitrogen and sediment were observed for up to eight years following a fire. nitrogen and phosphorus act as fertilizers for algae. An excess of these nutrients can trigger algal blooms in reservoirs, which can produce toxins and unpleasant odors.

This extended timeline indicates that wildfires are fundamentally altering landscapes in ways that require considerable time to recover. Prior laboratory research simulated this process by burning soil and vegetation and then running water over them.

A blackened mountain slope where all of the trees have burned.
After mountain slopes burn, the rain that falls on them washes ash, charred soil and debris downstream.
ben Livneh/University of Colorado

The leached substances form a combination of carbon, nutrients, and other compounds that can increase flood risks and degrade water quality, necessitating more expensive treatment at water treatment facilities. In severe instances,water quality may deteriorate to the point where communities are unable to draw river water,potentially leading to water shortages.

Following the Buffalo Creek Fire in 1996 and the Hayman Fire in 2002,Denver’s water utility spent more than US$27 million over several years to treat the water,remove more than 1 million cubic yards of sediment and debris from a reservoir,and fix infrastructure. State Forest Service crews planted thousands of trees to help restore the surrounding forest’s water filtering capabilities.

Challenges for Water Treatment

This enduring impact presents a significant challenge for water treatment plants responsible for ensuring the safety of river water for consumption. The study underscores the need for utilities to prepare for potentially eight or more years of compromised water quality, rather than just a few months immediately following a fire.

The research also indicated that the location of a fire is a factor.Watersheds with denser forests or more urbanized areas that experienced burning tended to exhibit even poorer water quality afterward.

Given that many municipalities rely on multiple water sources, understanding which watersheds are most likely to experience significant water quality issues after fires can assist communities in identifying the most vulnerable components of their water supply systems.

As temperatures rise and more individuals relocate to wildland areas in the American West,the risk of wildfires increases,making it increasingly evident that preparing for long-term consequences is essential. The health of forests and the quality of our communities’ drinking water are inextricably linked, with wildfires casting a long shadow that persists well after the smoke dissipates.

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