Effects of current forest practices on organic matter dynamics in headwater streams at the Trask river watershed, Oregon

被引:1
|
作者
Six, Laura J. [1 ]
Bilby, Robert E. [2 ]
Reiter, Maryanne [3 ]
James, Peter [4 ]
Villarin, Lauren [5 ]
机构
[1] Weyerhaeuser, 505 N Pearl St, Centralia, WA 98531 USA
[2] Weyerhaeuser, 220 Occidental Ave 5, Seattle, WA 98104 USA
[3] Weyerhaeuser, 785 42nd St, Springfield, OR 97478 USA
[4] Weyerhaeuser, 698 12th St SE 220, Salem, OR 97301 USA
[5] Weyerhaeuser, 32901 Weyerhaeuser Way S, Federal Way, WA 98001 USA
来源
关键词
Riparian buffer; Forest harvest; Organic matter; Large woody debris; Litter transport; Litter delivery; LARGE WOODY DEBRIS; MANAGEMENT-PRACTICES; OLD-GROWTH; CLEAR-CUT; RIPARIAN; TEMPERATURE; HARVEST;
D O I
10.1016/j.tfp.2022.100233
中图分类号
S7 [林业];
学科分类号
0829 ; 0907 ;
摘要
Forest management in riparian ecosystems can significantly alter biotic and abiotic processes in streams. Forest harvest without the retention of buffers along small streams can affect organic matter dynamics, and drive instream characteristics like trophic food webs. To investigate the extent to which differing levels of tree retention adjacent to the channel mitigated changes in organic matter dynamics, we examined coarse particulate organic matter delivery, transport, and retention, as well as canopy cover, along small streams with four harvest treatments, both before and after harvest. Our research was part of a larger effort of the Trask River Watershed Study (TRWS) in the northern Oregon Coast Range, which examined the long-term physical, chemical, and biological effects of forest management on aquatic ecosystems at multiple spatial scales. Canopy cover at reference and treatment sites prior to harvest was approximately 91%, but following harvest, mean canopy cover at treatment sites decreased with increasing harvest intensity: 3% decrease after clearcut with buffer, 14% after clearcut with leave trees, and 57% after complete clearcut. Organic matter delivery (i.e., the amount of leaf, needle, wood, reproductive, or miscellaneous litter material) to streams was dominated by leaves and varied seasonally but decreased overall after harvest with complete clearcut. Organic matter transport (i.e., the amount of material netted during a sampling period at the end of each stream reach) values fell within the observed range of reference values at all harvested sites. Organic matter retention (i.e., the amount of material sampled in plots systematically placed along the stream reach) post-harvest was dominated by woody material and was consistent with pre-harvest measurements and reference sites for all the harvested streams. The number of log jams, and the total weight of log jams, increased for all treatments after harvest, although the most dramatic increase in log jam weight (140% increase) was observed for the complete clearcut and clearcut with leave tree sites. On these five sites, our results indicated that while complete clearcutting reduced organic matter delivery, retention of even a small number of trees along these streams appeared to support litter delivery rates after harvesting comparable to before harvest. We acknowledge the limitations of results from single treatment sites; however, our results were generally consistent with studies that had full replication. As part of the Trask River Watershed study, our research adds to the comprehensive effort to understand the ecological significance of riparian buffers and forest harvest in headwater streams.
引用
收藏
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Enhanced chemodiversity, distinctive molecular signature and diurnal dynamics of dissolved organic matter in streams of two headwater catchments, Southeastern China
    Gong, Chen
    Jiao, Ruyuan
    Yan, Weijin
    Yu, Qibiao
    Li, Qingqian
    Zhang, Peipei
    Li, Yanqiang
    Wang, Dongsheng
    WATER RESEARCH, 2022, 211
  • [42] Effects of soil degradation and management practices on the surface water dynamics in the Talgua River Watershed in Honduras
    Hanson, DL
    Steenhuis, TS
    Walter, MF
    Boll, J
    LAND DEGRADATION & DEVELOPMENT, 2004, 15 (04) : 367 - 381
  • [43] Effects of changing land use on dissolved organic matter in a subtropical river watershed, southeast China
    Yang, Liyang
    Hong, Huasheng
    Guo, Weidong
    Huang, Jinliang
    Li, Qingsheng
    Yu, Xiangxiang
    REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE, 2012, 12 (01) : 145 - 151
  • [44] Effects of changing land use on dissolved organic matter in a subtropical river watershed, southeast China
    Liyang Yang
    Huasheng Hong
    Weidong Guo
    Jinliang Huang
    Qingsheng Li
    Xiangxiang Yu
    Regional Environmental Change, 2012, 12 : 145 - 151
  • [45] Allochthonous litter inputs, organic matter standing stocks, and organic seston dynamics in upland Panamanian streams: potential effects of larval amphibians on organic matter dynamics
    Checo Colón-Gaud
    Scot Peterson
    Matt R. Whiles
    Susan S. Kilham
    Karen R. Lips
    Cathy M. Pringle
    Hydrobiologia, 2008, 603 : 301 - 312
  • [46] Allochthonous litter inputs, organic matter standing stocks, and organic seston dynamics in upland Panamanian streams: potential effects of larval amphibians on organic matter dynamics
    Colon-Gaud, Checo
    Peterson, Scot
    Whiles, Matt R.
    Kilham, Susan S.
    Lips, Karen R.
    Pringle, Cathy M.
    HYDROBIOLOGIA, 2008, 603 (1) : 301 - 312
  • [47] Mercury and dissolved organic matter dynamics during snowmelt runoff in a montane watershed, Provo River, Utah, USA
    Packer, Brian N.
    Carling, Gregory T.
    Veverica, Timothy J.
    Russell, Kerri A.
    Nelson, Stephen T.
    Aanderud, Zachary T.
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2020, 704
  • [48] Use of ESI-FTICR-MS to Characterize Dissolved Organic Matter in Headwater Streams Draining Forest-Dominated and Pasture-Dominated Watersheds
    Lu, YueHan
    Li, Xiaping
    Mesfioui, Rajaa
    Bauer, James E.
    Chambers, R. M.
    Canuel, Elizabeth A.
    Hatcher, Patrick G.
    PLOS ONE, 2015, 10 (12):
  • [49] Evaluation of forest disturbance legacy effects on dissolved organic matter characteristics in streams at the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest, New Hampshire
    Kaelin M. Cawley
    John Campbell
    Melissa Zwilling
    Rudolf Jaffé
    Aquatic Sciences, 2014, 76 : 611 - 622
  • [50] Evaluation of forest disturbance legacy effects on dissolved organic matter characteristics in streams at the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest, New Hampshire
    Cawley, Kaelin M.
    Campbell, John
    Zwilling, Melissa
    Jaffe, Rudolf
    AQUATIC SCIENCES, 2014, 76 (04) : 611 - 622