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Forest management impacts on stream integrity at...
Journal article

Forest management impacts on stream integrity at varying intensities and spatial scales: Do abiotic effects accumulate spatially?

Abstract

Though effects of forest harvesting on small streams are well documented, little is known about the cumulative effects in downstream systems. The hierarchical nature and longitudinal connectivity of river networks make them fundamentally cumulative, but lateral and vertical connectivity and instream processes can dissipate the downstream transport of water and materials. To elucidate such effects, we investigated how a suite of abiotic indicators changed from small streams to larger downstream sites (n = 6) within three basins ranging in forest management intensity (intensive, extensive, minimal) in New Brunswick (Canada) in the summer and fall of 2017 and 2018. Inorganic sediments, the inorganic/organic ratios and water temperatures significantly increased longitudinally, whereas nutrients and the fluorescence index of dissolved organic carbon (DOC; indication of terrestrial source) decreased. However, some longitudinal trends differed across basins and indicated downstream cumulative (inorganic sediments, the inorganic/organic ratios and to a lesser extent DOC concentration and humification) as well as dissipative (temperatures, nutrients, organic sediments) effects of forest management. Overall, we found that the effects previously reported for small streams with managed forests also occur at downstream sites and suggest investigating whether different management practices can be used within the extensive basin to reduce these cumulative effects.

Authors

Erdozain M; Kidd KA; Emilson EJS; Capell SS; Kreutzweiser DP; Gray MA

Journal

The Science of The Total Environment, Vol. 753, ,

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

January 20, 2021

DOI

10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.141968

ISSN

0048-9697

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