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muddy river surrounded by charred aftermath of a wildfire
Wildfires can be lethal to fish. Whether their population is able to rebound depends on a number of competing factors. Photo by PJF Military Collection/Alamy Stock Photo

What Happens to Fish After a Wildfire?

The water keeps them safe … at first.

Authored by

by Starre Vartan

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When a wildfire rages, some animals fly, hop, or run to safety. But fish can’t.

During a fire, the temperature of a stream or river will sometimes rise to a lethal degree. If a fish survives without being cooked, short-term changes to its environment might finish it off. Denuded stream banks erode quickly, with topsoil and ash clouding streams and making it difficult for fish to breathe or find food. Even firefighting efforts are a threat: foam fire suppressants can suffocate fish, while fire retardants can be toxic.

Following those immediate threats, wildfires can also change a fish’s habitat for months and even years. If trees that once provided shade burned down, that stream’s water could heat up enough to make it unsuitable for cold-water fish, such as trout. Heat is particularly dire for eggs and fry.

Not surprisingly then, in the weeks and months after a wildfire, “fish populations will decline, sometimes dramatically,” says Rebecca Flitcroft, a fish biologist at the US Forest Service. Flitcroft points out that as populations, many animals, including fish, have evolved to survive severe, shorter events such as fires even if their numbers temporarily decline.

Indeed, while fire can be terrible for individual fish, the story for populations can be quite different. Ash from burned plants typically makes its way into streams and rivers, causing heightened loads of phosphorus, nitrogen, and potassium. These nutrient dumps often result in algae blooms, which, in turn, support more insects for fish to eat.

Uldis Silins, a forest hydrologist at the University of Alberta, has studied the post-fire repercussions of the Lost Creek fire that torched 200 square kilometers of southwestern Alberta in 2003. In that case, Silins saw benefits to the local cutthroat trout: “Fire produced a change to a limiting nutrient that was a benefit to the insect communities. And that increased [the] growth rate of fish,” he says.

In the watershed he studied, Silins found that underground springs kept the stream consistently cold, mitigating the loss of shade plants. The geology of the area helped the fish, too—particularly silty sediments held on to phosphorus, feeding the algae (and eventually the fish, via insects) at a constant rate.

Flitcroft’s research also indicates that wildfire can sometimes benefit species over the long-term. After the most recent fire in the Wenatchee River subbasin in Washington State in 2014 for instance, spring chinook salmon populations dropped, and then rebounded. Debris flowing into the river increased the amount of suitable habitat and actually ended up boosting the population.

Whether a fish population ultimately recovers from the devastation of a fire, Flitcroft says, depends on whether there are safe refuges up or downstream from burned areas, and whether intact populations from other areas move in to repopulate the spots decimated by fire.

Because the ability of fish communities to recover depends on several interacting factors, predictions for a specific population can be tricky, Silins says. “We can’t speak too generally about wildfires.”

Silins says there is still lots more research to do to understand how wildfires affect fish. His team has already begun: they’re now tracking how a vast span of British Columbia—10 times the size of their Lost Creek study area—evolved after it was burned in 2017 and 2018.