Physical indicators of hydrologic permanence in forested headwater streams

被引:58
|
作者
Fritz, Ken M. [1 ]
Johnson, Brent R. [1 ]
Walters, David M. [1 ]
机构
[1] US EPA, Natl Exposure Res Div, Cincinnati, OH 45268 USA
关键词
jurisdictional waters; intermittent; ephemeral; perennial; temporary; rapid habitat assessments; hydrology; geomorphology;
D O I
10.1899/07-117.1
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Recent court cases have questioned whether all headwater streams are jurisdictional waters under the US Clean Water Act. Rapid field-based indicators of hydrologic permanence are needed for making jurisdictional determinations. Our study objectives were to: 1) identify physical characteristics of forested headwater streams that best distinguish perennial, intermittent, and ephemeral reaches and 2) assess the applicability of existing rapid field-based tools for classifying hydrologic permanence across a wide geographic range. We surveyed reach- and drainage-scale characteristics at 113 sites across 10 study forests in the US. Streams in 4 core forests (61 core sites) were sampled over 2 consecutive years and were used in model construction. Streams in 6 satellite forests (72 satellite sites) were used to validate the models over a broader geographic range. Discriminant function models successfully differentiated hydrologic permanence categories at core sites. Drainage area, the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency Headwater Habitat Evaluation Index (HHEI), and the North Carolina Department of Water Quality Stream Classification Method (NCSC) were strongly correlated with the discriminant function that separated ephemeral from perennial and intermittent sites. Entrenchment ratio was the most consistent variable discriminating intermittent from perennial sites across the core forests. The models had mixed results when applied to the validation data set, but did classify correctly most intermittent and ephemeral sites. Classification trees were used to assess broad regional applicability of existing rapid field-based protocols and to identify important metrics. Scores from the Rapid Bioassessment Protocol Habitat Assessment, HHEI, and NCSC all clearly distinguished ephemeral from intermittent and perennial sites, but no differences were detected between intermittent and perennial sites across all sites. However, data from core sites do indicate that a suite of physical variables can be used successfully to identify hydrologic permanence at regional scales.
引用
下载
收藏
页码:690 / 704
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Larval salamanders and channel geomorphology are indicators of hydrologic permanence in forested headwater streams
    Johnson, Brent R.
    Fritz, Ken M.
    Blocksom, Karen A.
    Walters, David M.
    ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS, 2009, 9 (01) : 150 - 159
  • [2] Can bryophytes be used to characterize hydrologic permanence in forested headwater streams?
    Fritz, Ken M.
    Glime, Janice M.
    Hribljan, John
    Greenwood, Jennifer L.
    ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS, 2009, 9 (04) : 681 - 692
  • [3] RE: Comments from Anderson et al. on our manuscript, "Larval salamanders and channel geomorphology are indicators of hydrologic permanence in forested headwater streams", Ecological Indicators 9:150-159
    Johnson, Brent R.
    Fritz, Ken M.
    ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS, 2009, 9 (05) : 1037 - 1038
  • [4] Identifying invertebrate indicators for streamflow duration assessments in forested headwater streams
    Fritz, Ken M.
    Kashuba, Roxolana O.
    Pond, Gregory J.
    Christensen, Jay R.
    Alexander, Laurie C.
    Washington, Benjamin J.
    Johnson, Brent R.
    Walters, David M.
    Thoeny, William T.
    Weaver, Paul C.
    FRESHWATER SCIENCE, 2023, 42 (03) : 247 - 267
  • [5] Urbanization affects the extent and hydrologic permanence of headwater streams in a midwestern US metropolitan area
    Roy, Allison H.
    Dybas, Angel L.
    Fritz, Ken M.
    Lubbers, Hannah R.
    JOURNAL OF THE NORTH AMERICAN BENTHOLOGICAL SOCIETY, 2009, 28 (04): : 911 - 928
  • [6] RE: Johnson, BR, Fritz, KM, Blocksom, KA, Walters, DM (2008) "Larval salamanders and channel geomorphology are indicators of hydrologic permanence in forested headwater streams" [Ecological Indicators 9, 150-159]
    Anderson, Paul
    Tuckerman, Steve
    Bolton, Michael J.
    Davic, Robert
    Dudley, Dan
    Schumacher, Bill
    Skalski, Chris
    ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS, 2009, 9 (05) : 1039 - 1040
  • [7] Flow permanence affects aquatic macroinvertebrate diversity and community structure in three headwater streams in a forested catchment
    Clarke, Amber
    Mac Nally, Ralph
    Bond, Nick
    Lake, P. S.
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES, 2010, 67 (10) : 1649 - 1657
  • [8] Dynamics of river sediments in forested headwater streams: Plynlimon
    Leeks, G. J. L.
    Marks, S. D.
    HYDROLOGY AND EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCES, 1997, 1 (03) : 483 - 497
  • [9] Influence of Headwater Streams on Downstream Reaches in Forested Areas
    MacDonald, Lee H.
    Coe, Drew
    FOREST SCIENCE, 2007, 53 (02) : 148 - 168
  • [10] Characterizing stream temperature hysteresis in forested headwater streams
    Miralha, Lorrayne
    Wissler, Austin D.
    Segura, Catalina
    Bladon, Kevin D.
    HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, 2023, 37 (01)