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Data Series 275

U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY
Data Series 275

CHANNEL RESPONSE TO LOW-ELEVATION DESERT FIRE: The King Valley Fire of 2005

Prepared in Cooperation with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

By Robert H. Webb, Peter G. Griffiths, Cynthia S.A. Wallace, and Diane E. Boyer

Abstract

In late September to early October 2005, a fire swept north from the Yuma Proving Grounds and into the Kofa National Wildlife Refuge (NWR), traveling mainly along desert wash systems and low-relief alluvial fans. This fire burned 9,975 ha, moving through xeroriparian systems in washes as well as low-elevation desert ecosystems in King Valley, a major area of designated wilderness in the southern part of the Kofa NWR. Using satellite imagery, we determined that 9,255 ha of the Kofa NWR in King Valley burned. The fine-fuel loading for the fire was mostly a native forb (Plantago insularis), and the desert environment that was burned was mostly low-cover creosote bush (Larrea tridentata) scrub with scattered palo verde (Cercidium microphyllum). The wash environments had significant tree cover, including ironwood (Olneya tesota), blue palo verde (Cercidium floridum), desert willow (Chilopsis linearis), and/or smoke tree (Psorothamnus spinosa). This report presents monitoring data collected in June 2006 and January-February 2007 on the effects of this fire on channel morphology in King Valley.

Contents

Abstract
Introduction
Purpose and Scope
Background
Methods
Burned Sites
Unburned Sites

This report is available online in Portable Document Format (PDF). If you do not have the Adobe Reader, it is available for free download from Adobe Systems Incorporated.

Download the report (PDF, 18 MB)

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Send questions or comments about this report to the author, R.H. Webb, (2520) 670-6671 X238.

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