Abstract

Abstract. Surface disturbances above a cave have the potential to impact cave dripwater discharge, isotopic composition and solute concentrations, which may subsequently be recorded in the stalagmites forming from these dripwaters. One such disturbance is wildfire; however, the effects of wildfire on cave chemistry and hydrology remains poorly understood. Using dripwater data monitored at two sites in a shallow cave, beneath a forest, in southwest Australia, we provide one of the first cave monitoring studies conducted in a post-fire regime, which seeks to identify the effects of wildfire and post-fire vegetation dynamics on dripwater δ18O composition and solute concentrations. We compare our post-wildfire δ18O data with predicted dripwater δ18O using a forward model based on measured hydro-climatic influences alone. This helps to delineate hydro-climatic and fire-related influences on δ18O. Further we also compare our data with both data from Golgotha Cave – which is in a similar environment but was not influenced by this particular fire – as well as regional groundwater chemistry, in an attempt to determine the extent to which wildfire affects dripwater chemistry. We find in our forested shallow cave that δ18O is higher after the fire relative to modelled δ18O. We attribute this to increased evaporation due to reduced albedo and canopy cover. The solute response post-fire varied between the two drip sites: at Site 1a, which had a large tree above it that was lost in the fire, we see a response reflecting both a reduction in tree water use and a removal of nutrients (Cl, Mg, Sr, and Ca) from the surface and subsurface. Solutes such as SO4 and K maintain high concentrations, due to the abundance of above-ground ash. At Site 2a, which was covered by lower–middle storey vegetation, we see a solute response reflecting evaporative concentration of all studied ions (Cl, Ca, Mg, Sr, SO4, and K) similar to the trend in δ18O for this drip site. We open a new avenue for speleothem science in fire-prone regions, focusing on the geochemical records of speleothems as potential palaeo-fire archives.

Highlights

  • Caves are observatories, that preserve invaluable geochemical archives of past-climates; in the form of speleothems

  • Our analysis provides one of the first analyses of the response of dripwater δ18O and solute concentrations to post-wildfire conditions in shallow caves located in the tree rooting zone

  • Two periods of higher discharge are observed in August 2005 to May 2006 and April 2008 to February 2009, both coincide with positive trends in cumulative water balance (CWB)

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Summary

Introduction

That preserve invaluable geochemical archives of past-climates; in the form of speleothems (stalagmites, stalactites and flowstones). In-cave monitoring has predominantly focused on understanding the extent to which dripwater δ18O (Lachniet, 2009), dripwater solute concentrations (Fairchild and Treble, 2009), speleothem calcite growth (Wong et al, 2011), and cave CO2 processes (Breecker et al, 2012), are affected by climate. Such studies have largely been restricted to mid- to high latitude climate regions where precipitation (P )

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